Cancer associated fibroblast FAK regulates malignant cell metabolism

Fevzi Demircioglu, Jun Wang,Juliana Candido, Ana S. H. Costa,Pedro Casado, Beatriz de Luxan Delgado,Louise E. Reynolds, Jesus Gomez-Escudero,Emma Newport, Vinothini Rajeeve,Ann-Marie Baker, Marina Roy-Luzarraga,Trevor A. Graham, Julie Foster,Yu Wang, James J. Campbell,Rajinder Singh, Penglie Zhang,Thomas J. Schall, Frances R. Balkwill,Jane Sosabowski, Pedro R. Cutillas,Christian Frezza, Patricia Sancho,Kairbaan Hodivala-Dilke

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS(2020)

Cited 92|Views111
No score
Abstract
Emerging evidence suggests that cancer cell metabolism can be regulated by cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs), but the mechanisms are poorly defined. Here we show that CAFs regulate malignant cell metabolism through pathways under the control of FAK. In breast and pancreatic cancer patients we find that low FAK expression, specifically in the stromal compartment, predicts reduced overall survival. In mice, depletion of FAK in a subpopulation of CAFs regulates paracrine signals that increase malignant cell glycolysis and tumour growth. Proteomic and phosphoproteomic analysis in our mouse model identifies metabolic alterations which are reflected at the transcriptomic level in patients with low stromal FAK. Mechanistically we demonstrate that FAK-depletion in CAFs increases chemokine production, which via CCR1/CCR2 on cancer cells, activate protein kinase A, leading to enhanced malignant cell glycolysis. Our data uncover mechanisms whereby stromal fibroblasts regulate cancer cell metabolism independent of genetic mutations in cancer cells.
More
Translated text
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined