Abstract

Solid tumors are usually associated with extracellular acidosis due to their increased dependence on glycolysis and poor vascularization. Cancer cells gradually become adapted to acidic microenvironment and even acquire increased aggressiveness. They are resistant to apoptosis but exhibit increased autophagy that is essential for their survival. We here show that NF-κB, a master regulator of cellular responses to stress, is upregulated in colorectal cancer cells adapted to acidosis (CRC-AA). NF-κB is more relied upon for survival in CRC-AA than in their parental cells and drives a robust antioxidant response. Supplementation of antioxidant abolishes the increased sensitivity of CRC-AA to NF-κB inhibition or depletion, suggesting that NF-κB supports the survival of CRC-AA by maintaining redox homeostasis. Because SQSTM1/p62 is known to mediate the selective autophagy of GATA4 that augments NF-κB function, we tested whether the enhanced autophagic flux and consequently the reduction of SQSTM1/p62 in CRC-AA cells could activate the GATA4-NF-κB axis. Indeed, GATA4 is upregulated in CRC-AA cells and augments the NF-κB activity that underlies the increased expression of cytokines, inhibition of apoptosis, and reduction of reactive oxygen species. Interestingly, secretory factors derived from HCT15-AA cells, the soluble ICAM-1 in particular, also possess antioxidant cytoprotective effect against acidic stress. Together, our results demonstrate a prosurvival role of the p62-restricted GATA4-NF-κB axis in cancer cells adapted to acidic microenvironment.

Highlights

  • Cancer cells reside in a complex milieu or microenvironment that comprises stromal cells, immune cells, extracellular matrices, cytokines, and metabolites

  • To assess the level of autophagy in the cancer cells adapted to acidosis (CRC-AA) cells and test whether autophagy is critically required for the survival of the cancer cells under low extracellular pH, we first examined autophagic vacuoles by transmission electron microscopy (TEM)

  • Consistent with reports that chronic autophagy is an adaptive response of cancer cells to acidic microenvironment [20, 21], the acidosisacclimated colorectal cancer cells exhibit an increased autophagic flux

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Summary

Introduction

Cancer cells reside in a complex milieu or microenvironment that comprises stromal cells, immune cells, extracellular matrices, cytokines, and metabolites. Tumor progression is strongly influenced by the properties of the tumor microenvironment [1, 2]. Tumor microenvironment is usually hypoxic, poorly vascularized, and low in nutrients [2,3,4]. Due to the high rate of glycolysis in cancer cells and the poor vascularization in cancer tissues, cancer cells are usually immersed in an acidic microenvironment, which is known as extracellular acidosis [5,6,7]. While acute acidic exposure can be cytotoxic, tumor cells always become adapted to a chronic extracellular acidosis [2, Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity

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