Sour environment helps pancreatic cancer in mice thrive
Researchers in Germany and Austria have discovered that the acidic environment inside tumours plays a key role in promoting cancer survival and growth.
The tumour environment is harsh and sour, often deprived of oxygen and nutrients and filled with waste products. These conditions make it difficult for other cells to survive, yet cancer cells manage to thrive.
Scientists from German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) in Heidelberg and the Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP) in Vienna investigated how pancreatic cancer cells adapt their metabolism to cope with acidic environments (acidosis).
Wilhelm Palm, researcher at the DKFZ and co-leader of the study published in Science, said: “It is not just the lack of oxygen or nutrients that changes metabolism in the tumour – it is primarily the acidification of the tumour environment.”
When the cancer cell environment turned acidic, mitochondria fused into long networks by blocking a metabolic pathway called ERK, boosting their energy efficiency. In normal conditions, ERK induces mitochondria to divide.
Through CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing, scientists identified essential genes for pancreatic cancer cell growth under stress — including acidic conditions — in lab-grown cells, later confirmed in mice. When the scientists used ERK to prevent the mitochondria fusion, tumour cells in mice with pancreatic cancer lost their capacity to adapt to the stressful acidic environment, growing more slowly.
The other co-lead author from IMP, Johannes Zuber, said: “Acidosis equips cancer cells with metabolic superpowers that help them survive not only harsh conditions but also treatment stress. With that knowledge, we can now search for therapies under these more realistic conditions and explore new ways to break this resilience.”
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