info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Game-changing restraint of Ros-damaged phenylalanine, upon tumor metastasis article
Fecha
2018-02Registro en:
Gueron, Geraldine; Anselmino, Nicolás; Chiarella, Paula; Ortiz, Emiliano Germán; Lage Vickers, Sofia; et al.; Game-changing restraint of Ros-damaged phenylalanine, upon tumor metastasis article; Nature; Cell Death and Disease; 9; 140; 2-2018; 1-15
2041-4889
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Gueron, Geraldine
Anselmino, Nicolás
Chiarella, Paula
Ortiz, Emiliano Germán
Lage Vickers, Sofia
Paez, Alejandra
Giudice, Jimena
Contin, Mario Daniel
Leonardi, Daiana Beatriz
Jaworski, Felipe Martín
Manzano, Veronica Elena
Strazza, Ariel Ramiro
Montagna, Daniela Romina
Labanca, Estefania
Cotignola, Javier Hernan
Daccorso, Norma
Woloszynska-Read, Anna
Navone, Nora
Meissl, Roberto Jose
Ruggiero, Raul Alejandro
Vazquez, Elba Susana
Resumen
An abrupt increase in metastatic growth as a consequence of the removal of primary tumors suggests that the concomitant resistance (CR) phenomenon might occur in human cancer. CR occurs in murine tumors and ROS-damaged phenylalanine, meta-tyrosine (m-Tyr), was proposed as the serum anti-tumor factor primarily responsible for CR. Herein, we demonstrate for the first time that CR happens in different experimental human solid tumors (prostate, lung anaplastic, and nasopharyngeal carcinoma). Moreover, m-Tyr was detected in the serum of mice bearing prostate cancer (PCa) xenografts. Primary tumor growth was inhibited in animals injected with m-Tyr. Further, the CR phenomenon was reversed when secondary implants were injected into mice with phenylalanine (Phe), a protective amino acid highly present in primary tumors. PCa cells exposed to m-Tyr in vitro showed reduced cell viability, downregulated NFκB/STAT3/Notch axis, and induced autophagy; effects reversed by Phe. Strikingly, m-Tyr administration also impaired both, spontaneous metastasis derived from murine mammary carcinomas (4T1, C7HI, and LMM3) and PCa experimental metastases. Altogether, our findings propose m-Tyr delivery as a novel approach to boost the therapeutic efficacy of the current treatment for metastasis preventing the escape from tumor dormancy.