Metastatic cells exploit their stoichiometric niche in the network of cancer ecosystems

Castillo, Simon P.; Rebolledo, Rolando A.; Arim, Matias; Hochberg, Michael E.; Marquet, Pablo A.

Abstract

Metastasis is a nonrandom process with varying degrees of organotropism-specific source-acceptor seeding. Understanding how patterns between source and acceptor tumors emerge remains a challenge in oncology. We hypothesize that organotropism results from the macronutrient niche of cells in source and acceptor organs. To test this, we constructed and analyzed a metastatic network based on 9303 records across 28 tissue types. We found that the topology of the network is nested and modular with scale-free degree distributions, reflecting organotropism along a specificity/generality continuum. The variation in topology is significantly explained by the matching of metastatic cells to their stoichiometric niche. Specifically, successful metastases are associated with higher phosphorus content in the acceptor compared to the source organ, due to metabolic constraints in proliferation crucial to the invasion of new tissues. We conclude that metastases are codetermined by processes at source and acceptor organs, where phosphorus content is a limiting factor orchestrating tumor ecology.

Más información

Título según WOS: Metastatic cells exploit their stoichiometric niche in the network of cancer ecosystems
Título de la Revista: SCIENCE ADVANCES
Volumen: 9
Número: 50
Editorial: AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
Fecha de publicación: 2023
DOI:

10.1126/sciadv.adi7902

Notas: ISI