Abstract

Metabolic transformation of cancer cells leads to the accumulation of lactate and significant acidification in the tumor microenvironment. Both lactate and acidosis have a well-documented impact on cancer progression and negative patient prognosis. Here, we report that cancer cells adapted to acidosis are significantly more sensitive to oxidative damage induced by hydrogen peroxide, high-dose ascorbate, and photodynamic therapy. Higher lactate concentrations abrogate the sensitization. Mechanistically, acidosis leads to a drop in antioxidant capacity caused by a compromised supply of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) derived from glucose metabolism. However, lactate metabolism in the Krebs cycle restores NADPH supply and antioxidant capacity. CPI-613 (devimistat), an anticancer drug candidate, selectively eradicates the cells adapted to acidosis through inhibition of the Krebs cycle and induction of oxidative stress while completely abrogating the protective effect of lactate. Simultaneous cell treatment with tetracycline, an inhibitor of the mitochondrial proteosynthesis, further enhances the cytotoxic effect of CPI-613 under acidosis and in tumor spheroids. While there have been numerous attempts to treat cancer by neutralizing the pH of the tumor microenvironment, we alternatively suggest considering tumor acidosis as the Achilles’ heel of cancer as it enables selective therapeutic induction of lethal oxidative stress.

Highlights

  • The metabolic transformation has been recently included between the hallmarks of cancer cells

  • The resulting accumulation of lactate is accompanied by the acidification of the tumor microenvironment which is further pronounced by tumor hypercapnia and the activity of carbonic anhydrases IX and XII

  • Lactate and acidosis were linked to reactive oxygen species (ROS) burst and upregulation of antioxidant defense [26,27,28,30,31,32]

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Summary

Introduction

The metabolic transformation has been recently included between the hallmarks of cancer cells. CAIX/CAXII [13,14], lactate dehydrogenase [15,16,17], monocarboxylate transporters responsible for the import/export of lactate and H+ through the cytoplasmic membrane [17,18,19], and other components involved in the formation of the lactic acidosis have been pharmacologically targeted in an attempt to block the cancer progression. None of these approaches achieved the phase III clinical trial

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