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Uncoupling Hepatic Oxidative Phosphorylation Reduces Tumor Growth in Two Murine Models of Colon Cancer.

Citation
Wang, Y., et al. “Uncoupling Hepatic Oxidative Phosphorylation Reduces Tumor Growth In Two Murine Models Of Colon Cancer.”. Cell Reports, pp. 47-55.
Center Yale University
Author Yongliang Wang, Ali R Nasiri, William E Damsky, Curtis J Perry, Xian-Man Zhang, Aviva Rabin-Court, Michael N Pollak, Gerald I Shulman, Rachel J Perry
Keywords colon adenocarcinoma, glucose metabolism, insulin, Insulin resistance, uncoupling
Abstract

Obesity is associated with colon cancer pathogenesis, but the underlying mechanism is actively debated. Here, we confirm that diet-induced obesity promotes tumor growth in two murine colon cancer models and show that this effect is reversed by an orally administered controlled-release mitochondrial protonophore (CRMP) that acts as a liver-specific uncoupler of oxidative phosphorylation. This agent lowered circulating insulin, and the reduction of tumor growth was abrogated by an insulin infusion raising plasma insulin to the level of high-fat-fed mice. We also demonstrate that hyperinsulinemia increases glucose uptake and oxidation in vivo in tumors and that CRMP reverses these effects. This study provides evidence that perturbations of whole-organism energy balance or hepatic energy metabolism can influence neoplastic growth. Furthermore, the data show that glucose uptake and utilization by cancers in vivo are not necessarily constitutively high but rather may vary according to the hormonal milieu.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Cell reports
Volume
24
Issue
1
Number of Pages
47-55
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
2211-1247
DOI
10.1016/j.celrep.2018.06.008
Alternate Journal
Cell Rep
PMID
29972790
PMCID
PMC6056247
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