Fatty acid synthesis is required for breast cancer brain metastasis
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Brain metastases are refractory to therapies that control systemic disease in patients with human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2+) breast cancer, and the brain microenvironment contributes to this therapy resistance. Nutrient availability can vary across tissues, therefore metabolic adaptations required for brain metastatic breast cancer growth may introduce liabilities that can be exploited for therapy. Here, we assessed how metabolism differs between breast tumors in brain versus extracranial sites and found that fatty acid synthesis is elevated in breast tumors growing in brain. We determine that this phenotype is an adaptation to decreased lipid availability in brain relative to other tissues, resulting in a site-specific dependency on fatty acid synthesis for breast tumors growing at this site. Genetic or pharmacological inhibition of fatty acid synthase (FASN) reduces HER2+ breast tumor growth in the brain, demonstrating that differences in nutrient availability across metastatic sites can result in targetable metabolic dependencies.
Date issued
2021-04-01Department
Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of BiologyJournal
Nature Cancer
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Citation
Ferraro, G.B., Ali, A., Luengo, A. et al. Fatty acid synthesis is required for breast cancer brain metastasis. Nat Cancer 2, 414–428 (2021)
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
2662-1347