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Upregulation of cellular triacylglycerol - free fatty acid cycling by oleate is associated with long-term serum-free survival of human breast cancer cells


By JPGRAY - Posted on 24 February 2009

TitleUpregulation of cellular triacylglycerol - free fatty acid cycling by oleate is associated with long-term serum-free survival of human breast cancer cells
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2007
AuthorsPrzybytkowski E, Joly E, Nolan CJ, Hardy S, Francoeur AM, Langelier Y, Prentki M
JournalBiochem Cell Biol
Volume85
Issue3
Pagination301-10
Date PublishedJun
Publication Languageeng
ISBN Number0829-8211 (Print)
Accession Number17612624
Key WordsUp-Regulation, Oleic Acid/pharmacology, Models, Biological, Lipolysis, Kinetics, Humans, Female, Fatty Acids, Nonesterified/*metabolism, Esterification, Culture Media, Cell Survival/drug effects, Cell Line, Tumor, Apoptosis/drug effects, Triglycerides/*metabolism, Glycolysis, Serum-Free, Breast Neoplasms/*metabolism/*pathology
Abstract

We previously showed that exogenous oleate protects human breast cancer cells against palmitate-induced apoptosis in part by increasing esterification of this free fatty acid (FFA) into triacylglycerol (TG). Here, we studied the mechanism whereby oleate protects these cells against apoptosis induced by serum withdrawal. The metabolism of FFA, TG, and glucose, in parallel with long-term cell survival in the absence of serum, was investigated in a panel of human breast cancer cell lines and in nontransformed MCF-10A cells after treatment with exogenous oleate. Short-term (3-24 h) exposure of MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer cells to exogenous oleate resulted in a dose-dependent long-term (10 day) serum-free survival that correlated with the accumulation of TG in lipid droplets and with upregulation of lipolysis. Both effects persisted for several days after oleate removal. Rapid TG lipolysis and FFA re-esterification, supported by high rates of glycolysis that provide the glycerol backbone for TG synthesis, are consistent with the presence of very active TG-FFA cycling in human breast cancer cells. Only the cancer cell lines capable of accumulating TG showed long-term serum-free survival after oleate treatment. The results suggest that upregulation of TG-FFA cycling induced by oleate may be involved in maintenance of human breast cancer cell survival.

Notes

Journal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tCanada

URLhttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=17612624
Citation Key496
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