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We focus on researching all about mitochondrial research concerning cancer such as Breast Cancer, Pancreatic Cancer, Prostate Cancer, Lung cancer, Colon Cancer and Brain Tumors.
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What is Mitochondria and how does it affect cancer growth?
Mitochondrial function in cancer cell metabolism
Mitochondria are the major cellular source of NADH and house parts of the pyrimidine and lipid biosynthetic pathways, it plays various roles in cancer cell metabolism including but not limited to ATP metabolism, lipid metabolism and nucleic acid metabolism. Many different metabolites or intermediates in the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle are critical in cancer cell proliferation, metastasis and apoptosis.
Molecular Burglary: Cancer Cells Hijack Energy from Immune Cells
In theory, the immune system can recognize cancer cells as foreign and destroy them. In practice, this is often difficult, particularly after a tumor has become established in the body.
And even when immune cells, especially certain killer T cells, make it into a tumor, they face a hostile environment. This can include molecules that can disable T cells, low oxygen, and a lack of nutrients for energy. The end result is often a dysfunctional state known as T-cell exhaustion.
Now, a new study has confirmed the existence of yet another way that tumors can thwart T cells. In some tumors, a subset of cancer cells can act like a thief siphoning fuel from a car’s gas tank: they drain mitochondria—the tiny structures within cells that produce energy—from T cells and use them for their own energy needs.
This act of energy robbery sets up a one-two blow, producing less-efficient T cells and turbo-charged cancer cells, according to the results published on October 9 in Cancer Cell.
However, a silver lining is that any process cancer cells use to survive is a potential vulnerability. It’s not yet fully understood what triggers this mitochondrial hijacking. But once that process is teased apart, “it could serve as a future target [for treatment],” said Bo Li, Ph.D., of the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, who led the new study.
Researchers have known for some time that, in the environment in and around tumors, “there was an exchange of nutrients, other molecules, and even organelles for metabolic survival,” said Konstantin Salnikow, Ph.D., of NCI’s Division of Cancer Biology, who was not involved in the study.
“But here we learned that the mitochondria can be drained by cancer cells,” Dr. Salnikow continued. “This suggests yet another way that the mechanisms tumor cells use to survive can lead to the dysfunction of nearby T cells. This is really something new.”
Different Cancer Type
Different cancer type, different ways that it affects peoples lives. Here are some of it:
Scientists Discover Key Information about the Function of Mitochondria in Cancer Cells
Scientists have long known that mitochondria(Link is external) (Link opens in new window), the “powerhouses” of cells, play a crucial role in the metabolism and energy production of cancer cells. However, until now, little was known about the relationship between the structural organization of mitochondrial networks and their functional bioenergetic activity at the level of whole tumors.
In a new study, published in Nature, researchers from the UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center used positron emission tomography (PET) in combination with electron microscopy to generate 3-dimensional ultra-resolution maps of mitochondrial networks in lung tumors of genetically engineered mice. They categorized the tumors based on mitochondrial activity and other factors using an artificial intelligence technique called deep learning, quantifying the mitochondrial architecture across hundreds of cells and thousands of mitochondria throughout the tumor.
The authors examined two main subtypes of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) — adenocarcinomas and squamous-cell carcinomas and found distinct subpopulations of mitochondrial networks within these tumors. Importantly, they discovered that the mitochondria frequently organize themselves with organelles such as lipid droplets to create unique subcellular structures that support tumor cell metabolism and mitochondrial activity.
The study was led by Mingqi Han, Ph.D., a post-doctoral researcher in the lab of David Shackelford, Ph.D(Link is external). Dr. Shackelford is a UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center member and Associate Professor of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine at the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine.
The spatial maps of lung tumors that were obtained were rich in data that would take decades to manually annotate by eye. To overcome this bottleneck, the lab partnered with Dr. Stefano Soatto’s lab at the UCLA Vision Institute to develop a deep learning neural network that automatically identified and segmented mitochondria networks as well as other cellular organelles within tumors. Image analysis that would have taken over a decade to finish was accomplished in a matter of hours using machine learning software. This work was led by Dr. Han, Dr. Alex Wong and Alexandre Tiard.
The authors anticipate that mitochondrial populations in human cancer samples will not be mutually exclusive to their respective tumor subtype, but rather there will be a spectrum of activity.
The investigators say these findings provide key information about the function of mitochondria in cancer cells and could lead to new approaches to cancer treatment.
“Our study represents a first step towards generating highly detailed 3-dimensional maps of lung tumors using genetically engineered mouse models,” said Dr. Shackelford. “Using these maps, we have begun to create a structural and functional atlas of lung tumors, which has provided us valuable insight into how tumor cells structurally organize their cellular architecture in response to the high metabolic demands of tumor growth. Our findings hold promise to inform and improve current treatment strategies while illuminating new directions from which to target lung cancer.”
“Our study has uncovered a novel finding in the metabolic flux of lung tumors, revealing that their nutrient preference may be determined by the compartmentalization of their mitochondria with other organelles, either relying on glucose (“sugar”) or free fatty acids (“fat”),” said Dr. Han. “This discovery has important implications for developing effective anti-cancer therapies that target tumor-specific nutrient preferences. Our multi-modality imaging approach has enabled us to uncover this previously unknown aspect of cancer metabolism, and we believe that it can be applied to other types of cancer, paving the way for further research in this area.”
Article(Link is external) (Link opens in new window): Han, M. et al. Spatial mapping of mitochondrial networks and bioenergetics in lung cancer. Nature https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-05793-3 (2023).
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