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Microenvironmental autophagy promotes tumour growth
- Source :
- Nature, vol 541, iss 7637
- Publication Year :
- 2015
-
Abstract
- As malignant tumours develop, they interact intimately with their microenvironment and can activate autophagy1, a catabolic process which provides nutrients during starvation. How tumours regulate autophagy in vivo and whether autophagy affects tumour growth is controversial2. Here we demonstrate, using a well characterized Drosophila melanogaster malignant tumour model3,4, that non-cell-autonomous autophagy is induced both in the tumour microenvironment and systemically in distant tissues. Tumour growth can be pharmacologically restrained using autophagy inhibitors, and early-stage tumour growth and invasion are genetically dependent on autophagy within the local tumour microenvironment. Induction of autophagy is mediated by Drosophila tumour necrosis factor and interleukin-6-like signalling from metabolically stressed tumour cells, whereas tumour growth depends on active amino acid transport. We show that dormant growth-impaired tumours from autophagy-deficient animals reactivate tumorous growth when transplanted into autophagy-proficient hosts. We conclude that transformed cells engage surrounding normal cells as active and essential microenvironmental contributors to early tumour growth through nutrient-generating autophagy.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Necrosis
Carcinogenesis
Cell Communication
Models
Neoplasms
Tumor Microenvironment
Drosophila Proteins
Amino Acids
Cancer
chemistry.chemical_classification
Multidisciplinary
biology
Cell Transformation, Neoplastic
Drosophila melanogaster
Tumor necrosis factor alpha
Female
Signal transduction
medicine.symptom
Signal Transduction
General Science & Technology
Models, Biological
Article
03 medical and health sciences
medicine
Autophagy
Humans
Animals
Neoplasm Invasiveness
Interleukin 6
Cell Proliferation
Reactive oxygen species
Tumor microenvironment
Animal
Cell growth
Interleukin-6
Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha
Tumor Suppressor Proteins
Membrane Proteins
Biological Transport
Biological
Disease Models, Animal
030104 developmental biology
chemistry
Disease Models
Immunology
biology.protein
Cancer research
Reactive Oxygen Species
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14764687
- Volume :
- 541
- Issue :
- 7637
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Nature
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....61467651054b1273acd2d0b58d23ec4f