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Microenvironmental autophagy promotes tumour growth

Authors :
Theodossis A. Theodossiou
Kay Oliver Schink
Harald Stenmark
David Bilder
Gábor Juhász
Mohammed Mahidur Rahman
Ashish Jain
Nadja Sandra Katheder
Fergal O'Farrell
Tor Erik Rusten
Terje Johansen
Andreas Brech
Sebastian W. Schultz
Rojyar Khezri
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.

Details

ISSN :
14764687
Volume :
541
Issue :
7637
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....61467651054b1273acd2d0b58d23ec4f