Abstract

Simple SummarySolid tumors comprise metabolically hostile areas adjacent to metabolically friendly ones, and their distribution fluctuates in space and time. Selection pressure is maximal in hostile areas where cancer cells develop at least four survival strategies: to adapt themselves, to modify the microenvironment, to hibernate metabolically, and to escape. Escape marks the transition from a localized to an invasive tumor that may ultimately disseminate remotely, forming metastases. Based on the hypothesis that mitochondria are metabolic sensors that control these responses, we previously established that mitochondrial superoxide is a pro-metastatic intracellular signaling agent. Here, we tested MitoQ, a mitochondria-targeted ROS inactivator that already successfully passed Phase I safety clinical trials, as a potential inhibitor of the early steps of the metastatic cascade. Using human breast cancer cells as models in anticipation of preclinical and clinical assays, we report that MitoQ inhibits cancer cell migration, invasion, clonogenicity, sphere formation and spheroid stability.To successfully generate distant metastases, metastatic progenitor cells must simultaneously possess mesenchymal characteristics, resist to anoïkis, migrate and invade directionally, resist to redox and shear stresses in the systemic circulation, and possess stem cell characteristics. These cells primarily originate from metabolically hostile areas of the primary tumor, where oxygen and nutrient deprivation, together with metabolic waste accumulation, exert a strong selection pressure promoting evasion. Here, we followed the hypothesis according to which metastasis as a whole implies the existence of metabolic sensors. Among others, mitochondria are singled out as a major source of superoxide that supports the metastatic phenotype. Molecularly, stressed cancer cells increase mitochondrial superoxide production, which activates the transforming growth factor-β pathway through src directly within mitochondria, ultimately activating focal adhesion kinase Pyk2. The existence of mitochondria-targeted antioxidants constitutes an opportunity to interfere with the metastatic process. Here, using aggressive triple-negative and HER2-positive human breast cancer cell lines as models, we report that MitoQ inhibits all the metastatic traits that we tested in vitro. Compared to other mitochondria-targeted antioxidants, MitoQ already successfully passed Phase I safety clinical trials, which provides an important incentive for future preclinical and clinical evaluations of this drug for the prevention of breast cancer metastasis.

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