Breast cancer cell-secreted miR-199b-5p hijacks neurometabolic coupling to promote brain metastasis.
Xianhui RuanWei YanMinghui CaoRay Anthony M DazaMiranda Y FongKaifu YangJun WuXuxiang LiuMelanie PalomaresXiwei WuArthur LiYuan ChenRahul JandialNicholas C SpitzerRobert F HevnerShizhen Emily WangPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Breast cancer metastasis to the brain is a clinical challenge rising in prevalence. However, the underlying mechanisms, especially how cancer cells adapt a distant brain niche to facilitate colonization, remain poorly understood. A unique metabolic feature of the brain is the coupling between neurons and astrocytes through glutamate, glutamine, and lactate. Here we show that extracellular vesicles from breast cancer cells with a high potential to develop brain metastases carry high levels of miR-199b-5p, which shows higher levels in the blood of breast cancer patients with brain metastases comparing to those with metastatic cancer in other organs. miR-199b-5p targets solute carrier transporters (SLC1A2/EAAT2 in astrocytes and SLC38A2/SNAT2 and SLC16A7/MCT2 in neurons) to hijack the neuron-astrocyte metabolic coupling, leading to extracellular retention of these metabolites and promoting cancer cell growth. Our findings reveal a mechanism through which cancer cells of a non-brain origin reprogram neural metabolism to fuel brain metastases.
Keyphrases
- brain metastases
- small cell lung cancer
- resting state
- white matter
- functional connectivity
- cerebral ischemia
- papillary thyroid
- squamous cell carcinoma
- single cell
- breast cancer cells
- spinal cord
- ms ms
- room temperature
- machine learning
- young adults
- genome wide
- risk assessment
- spinal cord injury
- gene expression
- mesenchymal stem cells
- bone marrow
- squamous cell
- ionic liquid
- neural network