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Lowered circulating aspartate is a metabolic feature of human breast cancer

Distinct metabolic transformation is essential for cancer cells to sustain a high rate of proliferation and resist cell death signals. Such a metabolic transformation results in unique cellular metabolic phenotypes that are often reflected by distinct metabolite signatures in tumor tissues as well a...

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Autores principales: Xie, Guoxiang, Zhou, Bingsen, Zhao, Aihua, Qiu, Yunping, Zhao, Xueqing, Garmire, Lana, Shvetsov, Yurii B., Yu, Herbert, Yen, Yun, Jia, Wei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4741772/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26452258
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author Xie, Guoxiang
Zhou, Bingsen
Zhao, Aihua
Qiu, Yunping
Zhao, Xueqing
Garmire, Lana
Shvetsov, Yurii B.
Yu, Herbert
Yen, Yun
Jia, Wei
author_facet Xie, Guoxiang
Zhou, Bingsen
Zhao, Aihua
Qiu, Yunping
Zhao, Xueqing
Garmire, Lana
Shvetsov, Yurii B.
Yu, Herbert
Yen, Yun
Jia, Wei
author_sort Xie, Guoxiang
collection PubMed
description Distinct metabolic transformation is essential for cancer cells to sustain a high rate of proliferation and resist cell death signals. Such a metabolic transformation results in unique cellular metabolic phenotypes that are often reflected by distinct metabolite signatures in tumor tissues as well as circulating blood. Using a metabolomics platform, we find that breast cancer is associated with significantly (p = 6.27E-13) lowered plasma aspartate levels in a training group comprising 35 breast cancer patients and 35 controls. The result was validated with 103 plasma samples and 183 serum samples of two groups of primary breast cancer patients. Such a lowered aspartate level is specific to breast cancer as it has shown 0% sensitivity in serum from gastric (n = 114) and colorectal (n = 101) cancer patients. There was a significantly higher level of aspartate in breast cancer tissues (n = 20) than in adjacent non-tumor tissues, and in MCF-7 breast cancer cell line than in MCF-10A cell lines, suggesting that the depleted level of aspartate in blood of breast cancer patients is due to increased tumor aspartate utilization. Together, these findings suggest that lowed circulating aspartate is a key metabolic feature of human breast cancer.
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spelling pubmed-47417722016-03-11 Lowered circulating aspartate is a metabolic feature of human breast cancer Xie, Guoxiang Zhou, Bingsen Zhao, Aihua Qiu, Yunping Zhao, Xueqing Garmire, Lana Shvetsov, Yurii B. Yu, Herbert Yen, Yun Jia, Wei Oncotarget Research Paper Distinct metabolic transformation is essential for cancer cells to sustain a high rate of proliferation and resist cell death signals. Such a metabolic transformation results in unique cellular metabolic phenotypes that are often reflected by distinct metabolite signatures in tumor tissues as well as circulating blood. Using a metabolomics platform, we find that breast cancer is associated with significantly (p = 6.27E-13) lowered plasma aspartate levels in a training group comprising 35 breast cancer patients and 35 controls. The result was validated with 103 plasma samples and 183 serum samples of two groups of primary breast cancer patients. Such a lowered aspartate level is specific to breast cancer as it has shown 0% sensitivity in serum from gastric (n = 114) and colorectal (n = 101) cancer patients. There was a significantly higher level of aspartate in breast cancer tissues (n = 20) than in adjacent non-tumor tissues, and in MCF-7 breast cancer cell line than in MCF-10A cell lines, suggesting that the depleted level of aspartate in blood of breast cancer patients is due to increased tumor aspartate utilization. Together, these findings suggest that lowed circulating aspartate is a key metabolic feature of human breast cancer. Impact Journals LLC 2015-10-01 /pmc/articles/PMC4741772/ /pubmed/26452258 Text en Copyright: © 2015 Xie et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Xie, Guoxiang
Zhou, Bingsen
Zhao, Aihua
Qiu, Yunping
Zhao, Xueqing
Garmire, Lana
Shvetsov, Yurii B.
Yu, Herbert
Yen, Yun
Jia, Wei
Lowered circulating aspartate is a metabolic feature of human breast cancer
title Lowered circulating aspartate is a metabolic feature of human breast cancer
title_full Lowered circulating aspartate is a metabolic feature of human breast cancer
title_fullStr Lowered circulating aspartate is a metabolic feature of human breast cancer
title_full_unstemmed Lowered circulating aspartate is a metabolic feature of human breast cancer
title_short Lowered circulating aspartate is a metabolic feature of human breast cancer
title_sort lowered circulating aspartate is a metabolic feature of human breast cancer
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4741772/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26452258
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