Recently, we demonstrated that cancer dormancy is initiated within the lymphovascular tumor embolus and consists of decreased proliferation and lower mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) activity. In the present study, we investigated other intersecting metabolism-signaling pathways that may ultimately determine whether the lymphovascular tumor embolus remains dormant or undergoes cell death. The present study exploited a singular patient-derived xenograft (PDX) of inflammatory breast cancer (Mary-X) that spontaneously forms high density spheroids, the in vitro equivalent of emboli. The AMPK metabolic checkpoint pathway, the mTOR nutrient-responsive cell growth pathway, the P13K/Akt intracellular quiescence regulating pathway, and the calpain-mediated E-cadherin proteolytic pathway responsible for spontaneous spheroid-genesis were also investigated, to determine their relative contributions to dormancy. The levels of phosphorylated AMPK proteins (AMPKα and β subunits) decreased gradually with the formation of MARY-X spheroids in vitro. Rapamycin down-regulated mTOR activity, yet dormancy persisted. LY294002, a PI3K/Akt inhibitor, completely abolished mTOR and induced spheroid disadherence and apoptosis. Compound C (AMPK inhibitor) up-regulated mTOR and induced spheroid disadherence and apoptosis. Increasing cellular metabolism led to cell death, even in enriched medium, whereas growing the spheroids in serum-free media (starvation) did not result in further mTOR inhibition, and dormancy was maintained. An increase in our understanding of dormancy from the standpoint of internal signaling pathways might ultimately provide clues to the external stimuli (starvation, hypoxia or other not yet understood phenomena) that act through these pathways to maintain or disrupt dormancy.
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