Cancer-cell-secreted exosomal miR-105 promotes tumour growth through the MYC-dependent metabolic reprogramming of stromal cells

Wei Yan(University of California San Diego), Xiwei Wu(City of Hope), Weiying Zhou(City of Hope), Miranda Fong(University of California San Diego), Minghui Cao(University of California San Diego), Juan Liu(Duke University), Xiaojing Liu(Duke University), Chih-Hong Chen(City of Hope), Oluwole Fadare(University of California San Diego), Donald Pizzo(University of California San Diego), Jiawen Wu(University of California San Diego), Liang Liu(Tianjin Medical University Cancer Institute and Hospital), Xuxiang Liu(Duke University), Andrew R. Chin(University of California San Diego), Xiubao Ren(Tianjin Medical University Cancer Institute and Hospital), Yuan Chen(City of Hope), Jason W. Locasale(Duke University), Shizhen Emily Wang(University of California San Diego)
Nature Cell Biology
April 13, 2018
Cited by 480Open Access
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Abstract

Cancer and other cells residing in the same niche engage various modes of interactions to synchronize and buffer the negative effects of environmental changes. Extracellular microRNAs (miRNAs) have recently been implicated in the intercellular crosstalk. Here we show a mechanistic model involving breast-cancer-secreted, extracellular-vesicle-encapsulated miR-105, which is induced by the oncoprotein MYC in cancer cells and, in turn, activates MYC signalling in cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) to induce a metabolic program. This results in the capacity of CAFs to display different metabolic features in response to changes in the metabolic environment. When nutrients are sufficient, miR-105-reprogrammed CAFs enhance glucose and glutamine metabolism to fuel adjacent cancer cells. When nutrient levels are low and metabolic by-products accumulate, these CAFs detoxify metabolic wastes, including lactic acid and ammonium, by converting them into energy-rich metabolites. Thus, the miR-105-mediated metabolic reprogramming of stromal cells contributes to sustained tumour growth by conditioning the shared metabolic environment. Consistent crosstalk between cancer cells and stromal cells exists in the tumour microenvironment. Yan et al. show that exosomal miR-105 derived from cancer cells confers metabolic plasticity in recipient cancer-associated fibroblasts to adapt to nutrient-replete and -deplete conditions, thereby sustaining tumour growth.


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