학술논문

Inhibition of fatty acid oxidation as a therapy for MYC-overexpressing triple-negative breast cancer
Document Type
Report
Source
Nature Medicine. April 1, 2016, p427, 9 p.
Subject
Lipid peroxidation -- Health aspects
Breast cancer -- Genetic aspects -- Care and treatment
Transcription factors -- Properties
Biological sciences
Health
Language
English
ISSN
1078-8956
Abstract
Expression of the oncogenic transcription factor MYC is disproportionately elevated in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), as compared to estrogen receptor-, progesterone receptor- or human epidermal growth factor 2 receptorpositive (RP) breast cancer (1,2). We and others have shown that MYC alters metabolism during tumorigenesis (3,4). However, the role of MYC in TNBC metabolism remains mostly unexplored. We hypothesized that MYC-dependent metabolic dysregulation is essential for the growth of MYC-overexpressing TNBC cells and may identify new therapeutic targets for this clinically challenging subset of breast cancer. Using a targeted metabolomics approach, we identified fatty acid oxidation (FAO) intermediates as being dramatically upregulated in a MYC-driven model of TNBC. We also identified a lipid metabolism gene signature in patients with TNBC that were identified from The Cancer Genome Atlas database and from multiple other clinical data sets, implicating FAO as a dysregulated pathway that is critical for TNBC cell metabolism. We found that pharmacologic inhibition of FAO catastrophically decreased energy metabolism in MYC-overexpressing TNBC cells and blocked tumor growth in a MYC-driven transgenic TNBC model and in a MYC-overexpressing TNBC patient--derived xenograft. These findings demonstrate that MYC-overexpressing TNBC shows an increased bioenergetic reliance on FAO and identify the inhibition of FAO as a potential therapeutic strategy for this subset of breast cancer.
We hypothesized that MYC-dependent metabolic dysregulation is essential for MYC-overexpressing TNBC. To test this hypothesis, we investigated tumor metabolism in a conditional doxycycline-inducible transgenic model of MYC-overexpressing TNBC (MTB-TOM) (5,6). [...]