Journal Article10.1007/S12015-021-10216-9
Metabostemness in cancer: Linking metaboloepigenetics and mitophagy in remodeling cancer stem cells
Prajna Paramita Naik,Swagatika Panigrahi,Ratnakar Parida,Prakash Priyadarshi Praharaj,Chandra Sekhar Bhol,Shankargouda Patil,Nml Manjunath,Dipanjan Ghosh,Samir Kumar Patra,Sujit K. Bhutia +9 more
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TL;DR: In this article, the metabolic parameters that essentially govern the epitranscriptional gene reprogramming mechanism to dedifferentiate tumor cells into CSCs are discussed. But, the authors do not consider the effect of metabolic parameters on cell stemness.
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Abstract: Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are rare populations of malignant cells with stem cell-like features of self-renewal, uninterrupted differentiation, tumorigenicity, and resistance to conventional therapeutic agents, and these cells have a decisive role in treatment failure and tumor relapse. The self-renewal potential of CSCs with atypical activation of developmental signaling pathways involves the maintenance of stemness to support cancer progression. The acquisition of stemness in CSCs has been accomplished through genetic and epigenetic rewiring following the metabolic switch. In this context, "metabostemness" denotes the metabolic parameters that essentially govern the epitranscriptional gene reprogramming mechanism to dedifferentiate tumor cells into CSCs. Several metabolites often referred to as oncometabolites can directly remodel chromatin structure and thereby influence the operation of epitranscriptional circuits. This integrated metaboloepigenetic dimension of CSCs favors the differentiated cells to move in dedifferentiated macrostates. Some metabolic events might perform as early drivers of epitranscriptional reprogramming; however, subsequent metabolic hits may govern the retention of stemness properties in the tumor mass. Interestingly, selective removal of mitochondria through autophagy can promote metabolic plasticity and alter metabolic states during differentiation and dedifferentiation. In this connection, novel metabostemness-specific drugs can be generated as potential cancer therapeutics to target the metaboloepigenetic circuitry to eliminate CSCs.
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Citations
Drug and apoptosis resistance in cancer stem cells: a puzzle with many pieces
TL;DR: The CSCs drug and apoptosis resistance mechanisms and how to target C SCs are reviewed to help target CSC-associated drug resistance and metastasis in clinical settings.
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Low-dose BPA and its substitute BPS promote ovarian cancer cell stemness via a non-canonical PINK1/p53 mitophagic signaling.
Xiaoyu Yuan,Kelie Chen,Fang Zheng,Sinan Xu,Yating Li,Yuwei Wang,Heng Ni,Fang Wang,Zhenyan Cui,Yuheng Qin,Dajing Xia,Yihua Wu +11 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the effect of BPA/BPS exposure levels on the development of ovarian cancer was analyzed from NHANES 2013-2016 data and it was shown that environmentally relevant BPA and BPS exposure could enhance ovarian cancer cell stemness through a non-canonical PINK1/p53 mitophagic pathway.
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The metabolic addiction of cancer stem cells
Omprakash Sahoo,Karthikeyan Pethusamy,Tryambak Srivastava,Joy Talukdar,Mohammed Alqahtani,Ruby Dhar,Subhradip Karmakar +6 more
TL;DR: The metabolic-epigenetic circuity in relation to cancer growth and proliferation is explored and the fact how cancer cells may be addicted to specific metabolic pathways to meet their needs is established.
Transcending frontiers in prostate cancer: the role of oncometabolites on epigenetic regulation, CSCs, and tumor microenvironment to identify new therapeutic strategies
Giulia Ambrosini,Marco Cordani,Ali Zarrabi,Sergio Alcon-Rodriguez,Rosa M Sainz,Guillermo Velasco,Pedro Gonzalez-Menendez,Ilaria Dando +7 more
- 12 Jan 2024
TL;DR: This review aims to delve deeper into the implications of oncometabolite accumulation in prostate cancer, focusing on the consequential epigenetic alterations and impacts on cancer stem cells, with the ultimate goal of outlining novel therapeutic strategies.
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Pan-cancer analysis of the cuproptosis-related gene DLD
17 Mar 2023
TL;DR: In this article , the exact function of the cuproptosis-related gene DLD and its role in pan-cancer is unknown and the relationship of DLD with immune microenvironment immunomodulators, immune checkpoints, tumor mutational load (TMB) and microsatellite instability (MSI) and oncology drug sensitivity was explored by correlation analysis.
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