Targeting Ketone Body Metabolism in Mitigating Gemcitabine Resistance
收藏NIAID Data Ecosystem2026-05-02 收录
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https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/SRP540259
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Chemotherapy is often combined with surgery for muscle invasive and non-muscle invasive bladder cancer. However, 70% of the patients recur within 5 years. Metabolic reprogramming is an emerging hallmark in cancer chemoresistance. Here, we report a gemcitabine resistance mechanism which promotes cancer reprogramming via the metabolic enzyme, OXCT1. This mitochondrial enzyme, responsible for the rate-limiting step in Ã-hydroxybutyrate (ÃHB) catabolism, was elevated in muscle invasive disease and in chemo-resistant bladder cancer patients. Resistant orthotopic tumors presented an OXCT1-dependent rise in mitochondrial oxygen consumption rate, ATP, and nucleotide biosynthesis. In resistant bladder cancer, knocking out OXCT1 restored gemcitabine sensitivity, and administering the non-metabolizable ÃHB, enantiomer (S-ÃHB) only partially restored gemcitabine sensitivity. Suggesting an extra-metabolic role for OXCT1, multi-omics analysis of gemcitabine sensitive and resistant cells revealed an OXCT1-dependent signature with the transcriptional repressor, OVOL1, as a master regulator of epithelial differentiation. The elevation of OVOL1 target genes was associated with its cytoplasmic translocation and poor prognosis in a chemotherapy-treated BCa patient cohort. The knockout of OXCT1 restored OVOL1 transcriptional repressive activity by its nuclear translocation. Orthotopic mouse models of bladder cancer supported OXCT1 as a mediator of gemcitabine sensitivity through ketone metabolism and regulating cancer stem cell differentiation. Overall design: Three independent clones of 5637 parental and 5637 gemcitabine resistant cells were analyzed for gene expression differences associated with gemcitabine resistance.
创建时间:
2025-01-03



