An aberrant SREBP-dependent lipogenic program promotes metastatic prostate cancer.
Ming ChenJiangwen ZhangKatia SampieriJohn G ClohessyLourdes MendezEnrique Gonzalez-BillalabeitiaXue-Song LiuYu-Ru LeeJacqueline FungJesse M KatonArchita Venugopal MenonKaitlyn A WebsterChristopher NgMaria Dilia PalumbieriMoussa S DiolombiSusanne B BreitkopfJulie Teruya-FeldsteinSabina SignorettiRoderick T BronsonJohn M AsaraMireia Castillo-MartinCarlos Cordon-CardoPier Paolo PandolfiPublished in: Nature genetics (2018)
Lipids, either endogenously synthesized or exogenous, have been linked to human cancer. Here we found that PML is frequently co-deleted with PTEN in metastatic human prostate cancer (CaP). We demonstrated that conditional inactivation of Pml in the mouse prostate morphs indolent Pten-null tumors into lethal metastatic disease. We identified MAPK reactivation, subsequent hyperactivation of an aberrant SREBP prometastatic lipogenic program, and a distinctive lipidomic profile as key characteristic features of metastatic Pml and Pten double-null CaP. Furthermore, targeting SREBP in vivo by fatostatin blocked both tumor growth and distant metastasis. Importantly, a high-fat diet (HFD) induced lipid accumulation in prostate tumors and was sufficient to drive metastasis in a nonmetastatic Pten-null mouse model of CaP, and an SREBP signature was highly enriched in metastatic human CaP. Thus, our findings uncover a prometastatic lipogenic program and lend direct genetic and experimental support to the notion that a Western HFD can promote metastasis.
Keyphrases
- prostate cancer
- high fat diet
- squamous cell carcinoma
- small cell lung cancer
- endothelial cells
- pi k akt
- cell proliferation
- radical prostatectomy
- mouse model
- quality improvement
- insulin resistance
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- adipose tissue
- high glucose
- signaling pathway
- oxidative stress
- lymph node
- metabolic syndrome
- genome wide
- south africa
- benign prostatic hyperplasia
- papillary thyroid
- copy number
- cancer therapy
- hodgkin lymphoma