Title | Mitonuclear genotype remodels the metabolic and microenvironmental landscape of Hürthle cell carcinoma. |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2022 |
Authors | Ganly I, Liu EMinwei, Kuo F, Makarov V, Dong Y, Park J, Gong Y, Gorelick AN, Knauf JA, Benedetti E, Tait-Mulder J, Morris LGT, Fagin JA, Intlekofer AM, Krumsiek J, Gammage PA, Ghossein R, Xu B, Chan TA, Reznik E |
Journal | Sci Adv |
Volume | 8 |
Issue | 25 |
Pagination | eabn9699 |
Date Published | 2022 Jun 24 |
ISSN | 2375-2548 |
Keywords | Carcinoma, Hepatocellular, DNA, Mitochondrial, Genotype, Humans, Liver Neoplasms, Mutation, Oxyphil Cells, Thyroid Neoplasms, Tumor Microenvironment |
Abstract | Hürthle cell carcinomas (HCCs) display two exceptional genotypes: near-homoplasmic mutation of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and genome-wide loss of heterozygosity (gLOH). To understand the phenotypic consequences of these genetic alterations, we analyzed genomic, metabolomic, and immunophenotypic data of HCC and other thyroid cancers. Both mtDNA mutations and profound depletion of citrate pools are common in HCC and other thyroid malignancies, suggesting that thyroid cancers are broadly equipped to survive tricarboxylic acid cycle impairment, whereas metabolites in the reduced form of NADH-dependent lysine degradation pathway were elevated exclusively in HCC. The presence of gLOH was not associated with metabolic phenotypes but rather with reduced immune infiltration, indicating that gLOH confers a selective advantage partially through immunosuppression. Unsupervised multimodal clustering revealed four clusters of HCC with distinct clinical, metabolomic, and microenvironmental phenotypes but overlapping genotypes. These findings chart the metabolic and microenvironmental landscape of HCC and shed light on the interaction between genotype, metabolism, and the microenvironment in cancer. |
DOI | 10.1126/sciadv.abn9699 |
Alternate Journal | Sci Adv |
PubMed ID | 35731870 |
PubMed Central ID | PMC9216518 |
Grant List | P30 CA008748 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States R35 CA232097 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States |