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Mitochondrial plasticity supports proliferative outgrowth and invasion of ovarian cancer spheroids during adhesion

BACKGROUND: Ovarian cancer cells aggregate during or after exfoliation from the primary tumor to form threedimensional spheroids. Spheroid formation provides a survival advantage during peritoneal dissemination in nutrient and oxygen-depleted conditions which is accompanied by a suppressed metabolic...

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Autores principales: Grieco, Joseph P., Compton, Stephanie L. E., Bano, Nazia, Brookover, Lucy, Nichenko, Anna S., Drake, Joshua C., Schmelz, Eva M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9884807/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36727073
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2022.1043670
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author Grieco, Joseph P.
Compton, Stephanie L. E.
Bano, Nazia
Brookover, Lucy
Nichenko, Anna S.
Drake, Joshua C.
Schmelz, Eva M.
author_facet Grieco, Joseph P.
Compton, Stephanie L. E.
Bano, Nazia
Brookover, Lucy
Nichenko, Anna S.
Drake, Joshua C.
Schmelz, Eva M.
author_sort Grieco, Joseph P.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Ovarian cancer cells aggregate during or after exfoliation from the primary tumor to form threedimensional spheroids. Spheroid formation provides a survival advantage during peritoneal dissemination in nutrient and oxygen-depleted conditions which is accompanied by a suppressed metabolic phenotype and fragmented mitochondria. Upon arrival to their metastatic sites, spheroids adhere to peritoneal organs and transition to a more epithelial phenotype to support outgrowth and invasion. In this study, we investigated the plasticity of mitochondrial morphology, dynamics, and function upon adhesion. METHODS: Using our slow-developing (MOSE-L) and fast-developing (MOSE-LTICv) ovarian cancer models, we mimicked adhesion and reoxygenation conditions by plating the spheroids onto tissue culture dishes and changing culture conditions from hypoxia and low glucose to normoxia with high glucose levels after adhesion. We used Western Blot, microscopy and Seahorse analyses to determine the plasticity of mitochondrial morphology and functions upon adhesion, and the impact on proliferation and invasion capacities. RESULTS: Independent of culture conditions, all spheroids adhered to and began to grow onto the culture plates. While the bulk of the spheroid was unresponsive, the mitochondrial morphology in the outgrowing cells was indistinguishable from cells growing in monolayers, indicating that mitochondrial fragmentation in spheroids was indeed reversible. This was accompanied by an increase in regulators of mitobiogenesis, PGC1a, mitochondrial mass, and respiration. Reoxygenation increased migration and invasion in both cell types but only the MOSE-L responded with increased proliferation to reoxygenation. The highly aggressive phenotype of the MOSE-LTICv was characterized by a relative independence of oxygen and the preservation of higher levels of proliferation, migration and invasion even in limiting culture conditions but a higher reliance on mitophagy. Further, the outgrowth in these aggressive cells relies mostly on proliferation while the MOSE-L cells both utilize proliferation and migration to achieve outgrowth. Suppression of proliferation with cycloheximide impeded aggregation, reduced outgrowth and invasion via repression of MMP2 expression and the flattening of the spheroids. DISCUSSION: Our studies indicate that the fragmentation of the mitochondria is reversible upon adhesion. The identification of regulatory signaling molecules and pathways of these key phenotypic alterations that occur during primary adhesion and invasion is critical for the identification of druggable targets for therapeutic intervention to prevent aggressive metastatic disease.
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spelling pubmed-98848072023-01-31 Mitochondrial plasticity supports proliferative outgrowth and invasion of ovarian cancer spheroids during adhesion Grieco, Joseph P. Compton, Stephanie L. E. Bano, Nazia Brookover, Lucy Nichenko, Anna S. Drake, Joshua C. Schmelz, Eva M. Front Oncol Oncology BACKGROUND: Ovarian cancer cells aggregate during or after exfoliation from the primary tumor to form threedimensional spheroids. Spheroid formation provides a survival advantage during peritoneal dissemination in nutrient and oxygen-depleted conditions which is accompanied by a suppressed metabolic phenotype and fragmented mitochondria. Upon arrival to their metastatic sites, spheroids adhere to peritoneal organs and transition to a more epithelial phenotype to support outgrowth and invasion. In this study, we investigated the plasticity of mitochondrial morphology, dynamics, and function upon adhesion. METHODS: Using our slow-developing (MOSE-L) and fast-developing (MOSE-LTICv) ovarian cancer models, we mimicked adhesion and reoxygenation conditions by plating the spheroids onto tissue culture dishes and changing culture conditions from hypoxia and low glucose to normoxia with high glucose levels after adhesion. We used Western Blot, microscopy and Seahorse analyses to determine the plasticity of mitochondrial morphology and functions upon adhesion, and the impact on proliferation and invasion capacities. RESULTS: Independent of culture conditions, all spheroids adhered to and began to grow onto the culture plates. While the bulk of the spheroid was unresponsive, the mitochondrial morphology in the outgrowing cells was indistinguishable from cells growing in monolayers, indicating that mitochondrial fragmentation in spheroids was indeed reversible. This was accompanied by an increase in regulators of mitobiogenesis, PGC1a, mitochondrial mass, and respiration. Reoxygenation increased migration and invasion in both cell types but only the MOSE-L responded with increased proliferation to reoxygenation. The highly aggressive phenotype of the MOSE-LTICv was characterized by a relative independence of oxygen and the preservation of higher levels of proliferation, migration and invasion even in limiting culture conditions but a higher reliance on mitophagy. Further, the outgrowth in these aggressive cells relies mostly on proliferation while the MOSE-L cells both utilize proliferation and migration to achieve outgrowth. Suppression of proliferation with cycloheximide impeded aggregation, reduced outgrowth and invasion via repression of MMP2 expression and the flattening of the spheroids. DISCUSSION: Our studies indicate that the fragmentation of the mitochondria is reversible upon adhesion. The identification of regulatory signaling molecules and pathways of these key phenotypic alterations that occur during primary adhesion and invasion is critical for the identification of druggable targets for therapeutic intervention to prevent aggressive metastatic disease. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-01-16 /pmc/articles/PMC9884807/ /pubmed/36727073 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2022.1043670 Text en Copyright © 2023 Grieco, Compton, Bano, Brookover, Nichenko, Drake and Schmelz https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Oncology
Grieco, Joseph P.
Compton, Stephanie L. E.
Bano, Nazia
Brookover, Lucy
Nichenko, Anna S.
Drake, Joshua C.
Schmelz, Eva M.
Mitochondrial plasticity supports proliferative outgrowth and invasion of ovarian cancer spheroids during adhesion
title Mitochondrial plasticity supports proliferative outgrowth and invasion of ovarian cancer spheroids during adhesion
title_full Mitochondrial plasticity supports proliferative outgrowth and invasion of ovarian cancer spheroids during adhesion
title_fullStr Mitochondrial plasticity supports proliferative outgrowth and invasion of ovarian cancer spheroids during adhesion
title_full_unstemmed Mitochondrial plasticity supports proliferative outgrowth and invasion of ovarian cancer spheroids during adhesion
title_short Mitochondrial plasticity supports proliferative outgrowth and invasion of ovarian cancer spheroids during adhesion
title_sort mitochondrial plasticity supports proliferative outgrowth and invasion of ovarian cancer spheroids during adhesion
topic Oncology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9884807/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36727073
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2022.1043670
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