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PLCγ1 suppression promotes the adaptation of KRAS-mutant lung adenocarcinomas to hypoxia.

Maria SaliakouraMatteo Rossi SebastianoChiara PozzatoFlorian H HeidelTina M SchnöderSpasenija Savic PrinceLukas BubendorfPaolo PintonRalph A SchmidJohanna BaumgartnerStefan FreigangSabina A BerezowskaAlessandro RimessiGeorgia Konstantinidou
Published in: Nature cell biology (2020)
Mutant KRAS modulates the metabolic plasticity of cancer cells to confer a growth advantage during hypoxia, but the molecular underpinnings are largely unknown. Using a lipidomic screen, we found that PLCγ1 is suppressed during hypoxia in KRAS-mutant human lung adenocarcinoma cancer cell lines. Suppression of PLCγ1 in hypoxia promotes a less oxidative cancer cell metabolism state, reduces the formation of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species and switches tumour bioenergetics towards glycolysis by impairing Ca2+ entry into the mitochondria. This event prevents lipid peroxidation, antagonizes apoptosis and increases cancer cell proliferation. Accordingly, loss of function of Plcg1 in a mouse model of KrasG12D-driven lung adenocarcinoma increased the expression of glycolytic genes, boosted tumour growth and reduced survival. In patients with KRAS-mutant lung adenocarcinomas, low PLCγ1 expression correlates with increased expression of hypoxia markers and predicts poor patient survival. Thus, our work reveals a mechanism of cancer cell adaptation to hypoxia with potential therapeutic value.
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