PML-Regulated Mitochondrial Metabolism Enhances Chemosensitivity in Human Ovarian Cancers

Géraldine Gentric(Inserm), Yann Kieffer(Inserm), Virginie Mieulet(Inserm), Oumou Goundiam(Inserm), Claire Bonneau(Inserm), Fariba Némati(Institut Curie), Ilse Hurbain(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Graça Raposo(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Tatiana Popova(Inserm), Marc‐Henri Stern(Inserm), Valérie Lallemand-Breitenbach(Inserm), Sebastian Müller(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Tatiana Cañeque(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Raphaël Rodriguez(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Anne Vincent‐Salomon(Institut Curie), Hugues de Thé(Inserm), Rodrigue Rossignol(Université de Bordeaux), Fatima Mechta‐Grigoriou(Inserm)
Cell Metabolism
September 20, 2018
Cited by 297Open Access
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Abstract

High-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC) remains an unmet medical challenge. Here, we unravel an unanticipated metabolic heterogeneity in HGSOC. By combining proteomic, metabolomic, and bioergenetic analyses, we identify two molecular subgroups, low- and high-OXPHOS. While low-OXPHOS exhibit a glycolytic metabolism, high-OXPHOS HGSOCs rely on oxidative phosphorylation, supported by glutamine and fatty acid oxidation, and show chronic oxidative stress. We identify an important role for the PML-PGC-1α axis in the metabolic features of high-OXPHOS HGSOC. In high-OXPHOS tumors, chronic oxidative stress promotes aggregation of PML-nuclear bodies, resulting in activation of the transcriptional co-activator PGC-1α. Active PGC-1α increases synthesis of electron transport chain complexes, thereby promoting mitochondrial respiration. Importantly, high-OXPHOS HGSOCs exhibit increased response to conventional chemotherapies, in which increased oxidative stress, PML, and potentially ferroptosis play key functions. Collectively, our data establish a stress-mediated PML-PGC-1α-dependent mechanism that promotes OXPHOS metabolism and chemosensitivity in ovarian cancer.


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