Litcius/Paper detail

Metabolic Regulation of Epigenetic Modifications and Cell Differentiation in Cancer

Pasquale Saggese, Assunta Sellitto, Cesar A. Martinez, Giorgio Giurato, Giovanni Nassa, Francesca Rizzo, Roberta Tarallo, Claudio Scafoglio

2020Cancers46 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Metabolic reprogramming is a hallmark of cancer, with consistent rewiring of glucose, glutamine, and mitochondrial metabolism. While these metabolic alterations are adequate to meet the metabolic needs of cell growth and proliferation, the changes in critical metabolites have also consequences for the regulation of the cell differentiation state. Cancer evolution is characterized by progression towards a poorly differentiated, stem-like phenotype, and epigenetic modulation of the chromatin structure is an important prerequisite for the maintenance of an undifferentiated state by repression of lineage-specific genes. Epigenetic modifiers depend on intermediates of cellular metabolism both as substrates and as co-factors. Therefore, the metabolic reprogramming that occurs in cancer likely plays an important role in the process of the de-differentiation characteristic of the neoplastic process. Here, we review the epigenetic consequences of metabolic reprogramming in cancer, with particular focus on the role of mitochondrial intermediates and hypoxia in the regulation of cellular de-differentiation. We also discuss therapeutic implications.

Topics & Concepts

EpigeneticsReprogrammingBiologyChromatinCellular differentiationCancer cellPhenotypeEpigenesisCell biologyCellular adaptationCell metabolismEpigenetic regulation of neurogenesisCancerCellGeneticsChromatin remodelingDNA methylationGene expressionGeneEpigenetics and DNA MethylationCancer, Hypoxia, and MetabolismMitochondrial Function and Pathology