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LXR Signaling-Mediated Cholesterol Metabolism Reprogramming Regulates Cancer Cell Metastasis.

Pankaj K SinghKamiya Mehla
Published in: Cancer research (2023)
Metastasis is a key contributor to mortality in patients with cancer. While many regulators of metastasis have been identified, critical targets to prevent and inhibit metastatic tumor growth remain elusive. A recent study in this issue of Cancer Research by Deng and colleagues compared gene expression signatures between primary esophageal squamous cell carcinoma tumors and metastatic tumors and combined the analysis with genes induced in metastatic cancer cell lines, which identified anoctamin 1 (ANO1) as a key driver of metastasis. ANO1 caused cholesterol accumulation by inhibiting LXR signaling and decreased cholesterol hydroxylation by downregulating the expression of cholesterol hydroxylase CYP27A1. ANO1 also regulated tumor cell-fibroblast cross-talk that contributed to inflammatory cytokine signaling (IL1β) and metastasis. Through in silico analysis, the study identified a novel small-molecule inhibitor of ANO1 that decreased tumor burden at a metastatic site. These studies provide novel insights into the role of ANO1 in cellular cholesterol metabolism and associated signaling in mediating metastasis. See related article by Deng et al., p. 1851.
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