Tissue-specific and convergent metabolic transformation of cancer correlates with metastatic potential and patient survival.
Edoardo GaudeChristian FrezzaPublished in: Nature communications (2016)
Cancer cells undergo a multifaceted rewiring of cellular metabolism to support their biosynthetic needs. Although the major determinants of this metabolic transformation have been elucidated, their broad biological implications and clinical relevance are unclear. Here we systematically analyse the expression of metabolic genes across 20 different cancer types and investigate their impact on clinical outcome. We find that cancers undergo a tissue-specific metabolic rewiring, which converges towards a common metabolic landscape. Of note, downregulation of mitochondrial genes is associated with the worst clinical outcome across all cancer types and correlates with the expression of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition gene signature, a feature of invasive and metastatic cancers. Consistently, suppression of mitochondrial genes is identified as a key metabolic signature of metastatic melanoma and renal cancer, and metastatic cell lines. This comprehensive analysis reveals unexpected facets of cancer metabolism, with important implications for cancer patients' stratification, prognosis and therapy.
Keyphrases
- papillary thyroid
- squamous cell
- small cell lung cancer
- squamous cell carcinoma
- genome wide
- childhood cancer
- poor prognosis
- lymph node metastasis
- oxidative stress
- stem cells
- gene expression
- young adults
- binding protein
- bone marrow
- dna methylation
- copy number
- case report
- long non coding rna
- genome wide identification
- bioinformatics analysis