👤 D Hanahan

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Also published as: D. Hanahan
articles
T Marx, J Yang, S Zhou +216 more · 2022 · Cancer & Metabolism · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-20
T Marx, J Yang, S Zhou, Y Wang, Y Li, X Tong, F Guerra, AA Arbini, L Moro, M Huttemann, I Lee, LI Grossman, JW Doan, TH Sanderson, R Diaz-Ruiz, M Rigoulet, A Devin, WH Koppenol, PL Bounds, CV Dang, E Gottlieb, KH Vousden, OD Maddocks, D Hanahan, RA Weinberg, NP Echeverri Ruiz, V Mohan, J Wu, S Scott, M Kreamer, M Benej, T Golias, I Papandreou, NC Denko, MA Desbats, I Giacomini, T Prayer-Galetti, M Montopoli, CS Ahn, CM Metallo, VC Fogg, NJ Lanning, JP Mackeigan, YK Shin, BC Yoo, YS Hong, HJ Chang, KH Jung, SY Jeong, JG Park, MM Schroll, GJ LaBonia, KR Ludwig, AB Hummon, RL Siegel, KD Miller, A Goding Sauer, SA Fedewa, LF Butterly, JC Anderson, A Cercek, RA Smith, A Jemal, S Brandhorst, VD Longo, A Nencioni, I Caffa, S Cortellino, Y Liang, J Liu, Z Feng, CR Berkers, SM Mason, L Zheng, K Blyth, F Yang, SS Teves, CJ Kemp, S Henikoff, K Fujita, Y Kubota, H Ishida, Y Sasaki, A Signes, E Fernandez-Vizarra, Y Chaban, EJ Boekema, NV Dudkina, C Maletzki, S Stier, U Gruenert, M Gock, C Ostwald, F Prall, M Linnebacher, K Prabst, H Engelhardt, S Ringgeler, H Hubner, AV Kudryavtseva, GS Krasnov, AA Dmitriev, BY Alekseev, OL Kardymon, AF Sadritdinova, MS Fedorova, AV Pokrovsky, NV Melnikova, AD Kaprin, M Skrtic, S Sriskanthadevan, B Jhas, M Gebbia, X Wang, Z Wang, R Hurren, Y Jitkova, M Gronda, N Maclean, Y Chen, E McMillan-Ward, J Kong, SJ Israels, SB Gibson, AC Little, I Kovalenko, LE Goo, HS Hong, SA Kerk, JA Yates, V Purohit, DB Lombard, SD Merajver, CA Lyssiotis, C Bailly, SA Huisman, P de Bruijn, IM Ghobadi Moghaddam-Helmantel, CF Labuschagne, NJ van den Broek, GM Mackay, EF Fang, H Kassahun, DL Croteau, M Scheibye-Knudsen, K Marosi, H Lu, RA Shamanna, S Kalyanasundaram, RC Bollineni, MA Wilson, KF Chua, MP Mattson, VA Bohr, MO Turgeon, NJS Perry, G Poulogiannis, Y Rai, R Pathak, N Kumari, DK Sah, S Pandey, N Kalra, R Soni, BS Dwarakanath, AN Bhatt, JE Hutton, LJ Zimmerman, RJ Slebos, IA Trenary, JD Young, M Li, DC Liebler, M Tabuso, M Christian, PK Kimani, K Gopalakrishnan, RP Arasaradnam, BJ Altman, ZE Stine, J Yun, C Rago, I Cheong, R Pagliarini, P Angenendt, H Rajagopalan, K Schmidt, JK Willson, S Markowitz, G Giachin, R Bouverot, S Acajjaoui, S Pantalone, M Soler-Lopez, C Gorrini, IS Harris, TW Mak, S Vogt, A Rhiel, P Weber, R Ramzan, BB Das, A Ghosh, S Bhattacharjee, A Bhattacharyya, Y Pommier, E Leo, H Zhang, C Marchand, TM Ashton, WG McKenna, LA Kunz-Schughart, GS Higgins, A Bansal, MC Simon, L Marx-Blumel, C Marx, M Kuhne, J Sonnemann Show less
Background Metabolic adaptations can allow cancer cells to survive DNA-damaging chemotherapy. This unmet clinical challenge is a potential vulnerability of cancer. Accordingly, there is an intense se Show more
Background Metabolic adaptations can allow cancer cells to survive DNA-damaging chemotherapy. This unmet clinical challenge is a potential vulnerability of cancer. Accordingly, there is an intense search for mechanisms that modulate cell metabolism during anti-tumor therapy. We set out to define how colorectal cancer CRC cells alter their metabolism upon DNA replication stress and whether this provides opportunities to eliminate such cells more efficiently. Methods We incubated p53-positive and p53-negative permanent CRC cells and short-term cultured primary CRC cells with the topoisomerase-1 inhibitor irinotecan and other drugs that cause DNA replication stress and consequently DNA damage. We analyzed pro-apoptotic mitochondrial membrane depolarization and cell death with flow cytometry. We evaluated cellular metabolism with immunoblotting of electron transport chain (ETC) complex subunits, analysis of mitochondrial mRNA expression by qPCR, MTT assay, measurements of oxygen consumption and reactive oxygen species (ROS), and metabolic flux analysis with the Seahorse platform. Global metabolic alterations were assessed using targeted mass spectrometric analysis of extra- and intracellular metabolites. Results Chemotherapeutics that cause DNA replication stress induce metabolic changes in p53-positive and p53-negative CRC cells. Irinotecan enhances glycolysis, oxygen consumption, mitochondrial ETC activation, and ROS production in CRC cells. This is connected to increased levels of electron transport chain complexes involving mitochondrial translation. Mass spectrometric analysis reveals global metabolic adaptations of CRC cells to irinotecan, including the glycolysis, tricarboxylic acid cycle, and pentose phosphate pathways. P53-proficient CRC cells, however, have a more active metabolism upon DNA replication stress than their p53-deficient counterparts. This metabolic switch is a vulnerability of p53-positive cells to irinotecan-induced apoptosis under glucose-restricted conditions. Conclusion Drugs that cause DNA replication stress increase the metabolism of CRC cells. Glucose restriction might improve the effectiveness of classical chemotherapy against p53-positive CRC cells. Graphical Abstract The topoisomerase-1 inhibitor irinotecan and other chemotherapeutics that cause DNA damage induce metabolic adaptations in colorectal cancer (CRC) cells irrespective of their p53 status. Irinotecan enhances the glycolysis and oxygen consumption in CRC cells to deliver energy and biomolecules necessary for DNA repair and their survival. Compared to p53-deficient cells, p53-proficient CRC cells have a more active metabolism and use their intracellular metabolites more extensively. This metabolic switch creates a vulnerability to chemotherapy under glucose-restricted conditions for p53-positive cells. Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s40170-022-00286-9. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1186/s40170-022-00286-9
DNA-binding ROS mitochondria
Shenghua Shi, Huimin Lu, Tongguo Shi +96 more · 2019 · Cell Death & Disease · Nature · added 2026-04-20
Accumulating evidence suggests that aerobic glycolysis is important for colorectal cancer (CRC) development. However, the underlying mechanisms have yet to be elucidated. B7-H3, an immunoregulatory pr Show more
Accumulating evidence suggests that aerobic glycolysis is important for colorectal cancer (CRC) development. However, the underlying mechanisms have yet to be elucidated. B7-H3, an immunoregulatory protein, is broadly overexpressed by multiple tumor types and plays a vital role in tumor progression. In this study, we found that overexpression of B7-H3 effectively increased the rate of glucose consumption and lactate production, whereas knockdown of B7-H3 had the opposite effect. Furthermore, we showed that B7-H3 increased glucose consumption and lactate production by promoting hexokinase 2 (HK2) expression in CRC cells, and we also found that HK2 was a key mediator of B7-H3-induced CRC chemoresistance. Depletion of HK2 expression or treating cells with HK2 inhibitors could reverse the B7-H3-induced increase in aerobic glycolysis and B7-H3-endowed chemoresistance of cancer cells. Moreover, we verified a positive correlation between the expression of B7-H3 and HK2 in tumor tissues of CRC patients. Collectively, our findings suggest that B7-H3 may be a novel regulator of glucose metabolism and chemoresistance via controlling HK2 expression in CRC cells, a result that could help develop B7-H3 as a promising therapeutic target for CRC treatment. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41419-019-1549-6
amino-acid
J Mammucari, A Sreedhar, Y Zhao +345 more · 2017 · Frontiers in Oncology · Frontiers · added 2026-04-20
J Mammucari, A Sreedhar, Y Zhao, TN Seyfried, LM Shelton, R Rizzuto, D De Stefani, A Raffaello, C Mammucari, Y Kirichok, G Krapivinsky, DE Clapham, B Mertins, G Psakis, L-O Essen, E Rapizzi, P Pinton, G Szabadkai, MR Wieckowski, G Vandecasteele, G Baird, A Bononi, A Romagnoli, A Messina, V De Pinto, V Shoshan-Barmatz, S De, A Meir, M Colombini, S Naghdi, G Hajnóczky, S Reina, F Guarino, A Magrì, R Palty, WF Silverman, M Hershfinkel, T Caporale, SL Sensi, J Parnis, M Giacomello, I Drago, M Bortolozzi, M Scorzeto, A Gianelle, P Pizzo, G Csordás, P Várnai, T Golenár, S Roy, G Purkins, TG Schneider, F Fieni, S Bae Lee, YN Jan, E Teardo, I Szabò, JM Baughman, F Perocchi, HS Girgis, M Plovanich, CA Belcher-Timme, Y Sancak, VM Gohil, XR Bao, JE McCombs, AE Palmer, JD Martell, TJ Deerinck, TL Poulos, VK Mootha, GE Sosinsky, D Sabbadin, G Merli, A Picard, Y Lee, CK Min, TG Kim, HK Song, Y Lim, D Kim, K Oxenoid, Y Dong, C Cao, T Cui, AL Markhard, S Wang, X-C Su, JJ Chou, G Huang, AE Vercesi, R Docampo, J Prudent, N Popgeorgiev, B Bonneau, J Thibaut, R Gadet, J Lopez, RL Davis, S Xu, AD Chisholm, E Murphy, X Pan, T Nguyen, J Liu, KM Holmström, T Finkel, ME Dickinson, AM Flenniken, X Ji, L Teboul, MD Wong, JK White, C Liu, J Sun, Y Teng, ALL Markhard, T Kitami, E Kovacs-Bogdan, KJJ Kamer, NDD Udeshi, JC Liu, S Menazza, RJ Parks, MM Fergusson, A Jambhekar, RJJ Huber, H Vais, K Mallilankaraman, D-OD Mak, H Hoff, R Payne, JE Tanis, T Yamamoto, R Yamagoshi, K Harada, M Kawano, N Minami, Y Ido, M-F Tsai, CB Phillips, M Ranaghan, C-W Tsai, Y Wu, C Williams, T König, SE Tröder, K Bakka, A Korwitz, R Richter-Dennerlein, PA Lampe, P-C Pao, C Miller, P Doonan, C Cárdenas, HC Chandramoorthy, M Müller, R Miller, NE Hoffman, S Shamugapriya, X Zhang, S Rajan, EL Seifert, KJ Kamer, L Wang, X Yang, S Li, Z Wang, Y Liu, J Feng, CV Logan, JA Sharpe, DA Parry, S Torelli, A-M Childs, AN Antony, M Paillard, C Moffat, E Juskeviciute, J Correnti, B Bolon, M Patron, V Checchetto, D Vecellio Reane, M Mantoan, G Szanda, V Debattisti, A Bartok, PG M’Angale, BE Staveley, RL Bogorad, L Strittmatter, AA Li, C Petrungaro, KM Zimmermann, V Küttner, M Fischer, J Dengjel, I Bogeski, F Vallese, L Acquasaliente, G Butera, V De Filippis, PJ Doonan, KM Irrinki, D Tomar, Z Dong, S Shanmughapriya, DA Koch, T Thomas, V Paupe, EP Dassa, OZ Rendon, EA Shoubridge, JK Foskett, ND Udeshi, D Chaudhuri, DJ Artiga, SA Abiria, S Guo, JE Kolesar, J Qiu, Y-W Tan, AM Hagenston, M-A Martel, N Kneisel, PA Skehel, S Marchi, L Lupini, S Patergnani, A Rimessi, S Missiroli, M Bonora, L Pan, B-J Huang, X-E Ma, S-Y Wang, F Lv, Z Hong, KH Chen, A Dasgupta, F Potus, K Dunham-Snary, S Bonnet, MA Joiner, OM Koval, J Li, BJ He, C Allamargot, Z Gao, DE Johnson, A Hudmon, J O-Uchi, BS Jhun, S Hurst, X Liu, N Siddiqui, S Lynch, N Nemani, CT Madreiter-Sokolowski, C Klec, W Parichatikanond, S Stryeck, B Gottschalk, S Pulido, D Hanahan, RA Weinberg, DD Hall, FE Domann, DR Spitz, ME Anderson, S Tang, X Wang, Q Shen, C Yu, C Cai, MC Curry, AA Peters, PA Kenny, SJ Roberts-Thomson, GR Monteith, A Tosatto, R Sommaggio, C Kummerow, RB Bentham, TS Blacker, T Berecz, X Zhou, Y Ren, L Kong, G Cai, S Sun, W Song, J Long, Z-B Zhang, Z Liu, Y-H Xu, C-L Ge, MJ Yoon, AR Lee, SA Jeong, Y-S Kim, JY Kim, Y-J Kwon, C Wiel, H Lallet-Daher, D Gitenay, B Gras, B Le Calvé, A Augert, T Pozzan, TT Nguyen, TP Rasmussen, M-LA Joiner, B Chen, NR Wilson, ED Luczak, JQ Kwong, X Lu, RN Correll, JA Schwanekamp, RJ Vagnozzi, MA Sargent, TS Luongo, JP Lambert, A Yuan, P Gross, J Song, G Gherardi, I Zamparo, S Boncompagni, F Chemello, S Zampieri, V Romanello, L Barberi, L Pietrangelo, A Fusella, AI Tarasov, F Semplici, MA Ravier, EA Bellomo, TJ Pullen, P Gilon, L Gu, JL Larson-Casey, AB Carter, V Bezzerri, G Cabrini Show less
Mitochondrial Ca 2+ uptake plays a pivotal role both in cell energy balance and in cell fate determination. Studies on the role of mitochondrial Ca 2+ signaling in pathophysiology have been favored Show more
Mitochondrial Ca 2+ uptake plays a pivotal role both in cell energy balance and in cell fate determination. Studies on the role of mitochondrial Ca 2+ signaling in pathophysiology have been favored by the identification of the genes encoding the mitochondrial calcium uniporter (MCU) and its regulatory subunits. Thus, research carried on in the last years on one hand has determined the structure of the MCU complex and its regulation, on the other has uncovered the consequences of dysregulated mitochondrial Ca 2+ signaling in cell and tissue homeostasis. Whether mitochondrial Ca 2+ uptake can be exploited as a weapon to counteract cancer progression is debated. In this review, we summarize recent research on the molecular structure of the MCU, the regulatory mechanisms that control its activity and its relevance in pathophysiology, focusing in particular on its role in cancer progression. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2017.00139
mitochondria review