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A unique subset of glycolytic tumour-propagating cells drives squamous cell carcinoma.

Jee-Eun ChoiCarlos SebastianChristina M FerrerCaroline A LewisMoshe Sade-FeldmanThomas J LaSalleAnna L K GonyeBegona G C LopezWalid M AbdelmoulaMichael S ReganMurat CetinbasGloria PascualGregory R WojtkiewiczGiorgia G SilveiraRuben BoonKenneth N RossMichael MintsSrinivas V SaladiLeif W EllisenRuslan I SadreyevSalvador Aznar BenitahNathalie Y R AgarNir HacohenRaul Mostoslavsky
Published in: Nature metabolism (2021)
Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) remains among the most aggressive human cancers. Tumour progression and aggressiveness in SCC are largely driven by tumour-propagating cells (TPCs). Aerobic glycolysis, also known as the Warburg effect, is a characteristic of many cancers; however, whether this adaptation is functionally important in SCC, and at which stage, remains poorly understood. Here, we show that the NAD+-dependent histone deacetylase sirtuin 6 is a robust tumour suppressor in SCC, acting as a modulator of glycolysis in these tumours. Remarkably, rather than a late adaptation, we find enhanced glycolysis specifically in TPCs. More importantly, using single-cell RNA sequencing of TPCs, we identify a subset of TPCs with higher glycolysis and enhanced pentose phosphate pathway and glutathione metabolism, characteristics that are strongly associated with a better antioxidant response. Together, our studies uncover enhanced glycolysis as a main driver in SCC, and, more importantly, identify a subset of TPCs as the cell of origin for the Warburg effect, defining metabolism as a key feature of intra-tumour heterogeneity.
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