학술논문

Cancer cells escape autophagy inhibition via NRF2-induced macropinocytosis
Document Type
article
Source
Cancer Cell. 39(5)
Subject
Digestive Diseases
Orphan Drug
Cancer
Rare Diseases
Pancreatic Cancer
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Animals
Autophagy
Carcinoma
Pancreatic Ductal
Mice
NF-E2-Related Factor 2
Oxidative Stress
Pancreatic Neoplasms
Pinocytosis
Sequestosome-1 Protein
Signal Transduction
NRF2
RAS-driven cancer
autophagy
macropinocytosis
p62/SQSTM1
Neurosciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Oncology & Carcinogenesis
Language
Abstract
Many cancers, including pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), depend on autophagy-mediated scavenging and recycling of intracellular macromolecules, suggesting that autophagy blockade should cause tumor starvation and regression. However, until now autophagy-inhibiting monotherapies have not demonstrated potent anti-cancer activity. We now show that autophagy blockade prompts established PDAC to upregulate and utilize an alternative nutrient procurement pathway: macropinocytosis (MP) that allows tumor cells to extract nutrients from extracellular sources and use them for energy generation. The autophagy to MP switch, which may be evolutionarily conserved and not cancer cell restricted, depends on activation of transcription factor NRF2 by the autophagy adaptor p62/SQSTM1. NRF2 activation by oncogenic mutations, hypoxia, and oxidative stress also results in MP upregulation. Inhibition of MP in autophagy-compromised PDAC elicits dramatic metabolic decline and regression of transplanted and autochthonous tumors, suggesting the therapeutic promise of combining autophagy and MP inhibitors in the clinic.