Mitochondrial Horizontal Transfer in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer

Abstract

We seek to understand this communication in an effort to overcome these barriers. Macrophages are a component of the immune system. Their best known function is to seek and destroy foreign particles. However, in the tumor environment, macrophages have a very different role macrophages can facilitate steps of metastasis by communicating with cancer cells and helping cancer cells leave the tumor, enter the blood stream, and grow at the metastatic site. We discovered that macrophages transfer mitochondria to triple negative breast cancer cells, regulating cancer cell proliferation. We polarized macrophages to an M2-like state and found increased mitochondrial transfer to cancer cells. Furthermore, increasing and decreasing mitochondrial fragmentation in macrophages by overexpressing and inhibiting a key mitochondrial fission machinery player, DRP-1, led to increased and decreased mitochondrial transfer, respectively. We are now optimizing conditions to assess macrophage mitochondrial transfer to patient-derived cells, and are performing experiment to mechanistically understand how macrophage mitochondrial transfer leads to increased breast cancer cell proliferation.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Nov 01, 2023
Accession Number
AD1229674

Entities

People

  • Minna Roh-johnson

Organizations

  • University of Utah

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Biology

Readers

  • Molecular and Cellular Biology
  • Oncology (Cancer Research).