Mitochondrial metabolism in primary and metastatic human kidney cancers

Divya Bezwada(Children's Medical Center), Nicholas P. Lesner(Children's Medical Center), Bailey Brooks(Children's Medical Center), Hieu Vu(Children's Medical Center), Zheng Wu(Children's Medical Center), Ling Cai(Quantitative BioSciences), Stacy Y. Kasitinon(Children's Medical Center), Sherwin Kelekar(Children's Medical Center), Feng Cai(Children's Medical Center), Arin B. Aurora(Children's Medical Center), McKenzie Patrick(Children's Medical Center), Ashley Leach(Children's Medical Center), Rashed Ghandour, Yuanyuan Zhang(Children's Medical Center), Duyen Do(Children's Medical Center), Jessica Sudderth(Children's Medical Center), Dennis Dumesnil(Children's Medical Center), Sara House(Children's Medical Center), Tracy I. Rosales(Children's Medical Center), Alan M. Poole(Children's Medical Center), Yair Lotan, Solomon L. Woldu, Aditya Bagrodia, Xiaosong Meng, Jeffrey A. Cadeddu, Prashant Mishra(Children's Medical Center), Iván Pedrosa, Payal Kapur, Kevin D. Courtney, Craig R. Malloy(Advanced Imaging Research (United States)), Vitaly Margulis, Ralph J. DeBerardinis(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
February 7, 2023
Cited by 17Open Access
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Abstract

Summary Most kidney cancers display evidence of metabolic dysfunction 1–4 but how this relates to cancer progression in humans is unknown. We used a multidisciplinary approach to infuse 13 C-labeled nutrients during surgical tumour resection in over 70 patients with kidney cancer. Labeling from [U- 13 C]glucose varies across cancer subtypes, indicating that the kidney environment alone cannot account for all metabolic reprogramming in these tumours. Compared to the adjacent kidney, clear cell renal cell carcinomas (ccRCC) display suppressed labelling of tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle intermediates in vivo and in organotypic slices cultured ex vivo, indicating that suppressed labeling is tissue intrinsic. Infusions of [1,2- 13 C]acetate and [U- 13 C]glutamine in patients, coupled with respiratory flux of mitochondria isolated from kidney and tumour tissue, reveal primary defects in mitochondrial function in human ccRCC. However, ccRCC metastases unexpectedly have enhanced labeling of TCA cycle intermediates compared to primary ccRCCs, indicating a divergent metabolic program during ccRCC metastasis in patients. In mice, stimulating respiration in ccRCC cells is sufficient to promote metastatic colonization. Altogether, these findings indicate that metabolic properties evolve during human kidney cancer progression, and suggest that mitochondrial respiration may be limiting for ccRCC metastasis but not for ccRCC growth at the site of origin.


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