Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2039708 Cell Reports 2016 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Resistance to antiangiogenic therapy involves metabolic symbiosis patterning in RCC•mTOR pathway mediates this resistance and mTOR inhibition blocks metabolic symbiosis•In patients, antiangiogenics induce symbiotic patterning mostly in resistant tumors•mTOR pathway implication is also suggested in patients treated with antiangiogenics

SummaryAntiangiogenic drugs are used clinically for treatment of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) as a standard first-line treatment. Nevertheless, these agents primarily serve to stabilize disease, and resistance eventually develops concomitant with progression. Here, we implicate metabolic symbiosis between tumor cells distal and proximal to remaining vessels as a mechanism of resistance to antiangiogenic therapies in patient-derived RCC orthoxenograft (PDX) models and in clinical samples. This metabolic patterning is regulated by the mTOR pathway, and its inhibition effectively blocks metabolic symbiosis in PDX models. Clinically, patients treated with antiangiogenics consistently present with histologic signatures of metabolic symbiosis that are exacerbated in resistant tumors. Furthermore, the mTOR pathway is also associated in clinical samples, and its inhibition eliminates symbiotic patterning in patient samples. Overall, these data support a mechanism of resistance to antiangiogenics involving metabolic compartmentalization of tumor cells that can be inhibited by mTOR-targeted drugs.

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