Abstract
Cancer cachexia is the result of complex interorgan interactions initiated by cancer cells and changes in patient behavior such as decreased physical activity and energy intake. Therefore, it is crucial to distinguish between the direct and indirect effects of cancer cells on muscle mass regulation and bioenergetics to identify novel therapeutic targets. In this study, we investigated the direct effects of Colon-26 cancer cells on the molecular regulating machinery of muscle mass and its bioenergetics using a coculture system with C2C12 myotubes. Our results demonstrated that coculture with Colon-26 cells induced myotube atrophy and reduced skeletal muscle protein synthesis and its regulating mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 signal transduction. However, we did not observe any activating effects on protein degradation pathways including ubiquitin-proteasome and autophagy-lysosome systems. From a bioenergetic perspective, coculture with Colon-26 cells decreased the complex I-driven, but not complex II-driven, mitochondrial ATP production capacity, while increasing glycolytic enzyme activity and glycolytic metabolites, suggesting a shift in energy metabolism toward glycolysis dominance. Gene expression profiling by RNA sequencing showed that the increased activity of glycolytic enzymes was consistent with changes in gene expression. However, the decreased ATP production capacity of mitochondria was not in line with the gene expression. The potential direct interaction between cancer cells and skeletal muscle cells revealed in this study may contribute to a better fundamental understanding of the complex pathophysiology of cancer cachexia.NEW & NOTEWORTHY We explored the potential direct interplay between colon cancer cells (Colon-26) and skeletal muscle cells (C2C12 myotubes) employing a noncontact coculture experimental model. Our findings reveal that coculturing with Colon-26 cells substantially impairs the protein synthesis rate, concurrently instigating a metabolic shift toward glycolytic dominance in C2C12 myotubes. This research unveils critical insights into the intricate cellular cross talk underpinning the complex pathophysiology of cancer cachexia.
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