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LXR stimulates a metabolic switch and reveals cholesterol homeostasis as a statin target in Tasmanian devil facial tumor disease

Ikonomopoulou, Maria P.; Lopez-Mancheno, Yaiza; Novelle, Marta G.; Martinez-Una, Maite; Gangoda, Lahiru; Pal, Martin; Filipe Costa-Machado, Luis; Jose Fernandez-Marcos, Pablo; Ramm, Grant A.; Alejandro Fernandez-Rojo, Manuel

CELL REPORTS
2021
VL / 34 - BP / - EP /
abstract
Devil facial tumor disease (DFTD) and its lack of available therapies are propelling the Tasmanian devil population toward extinction. This study demonstrates that cholesterol homeostasis and carbohydrate energy metabolism sustain the proliferation of DFTD cells in a cell-type-dependent manner. In addition, we show that the liver-X nuclear receptor-beta (LXR beta), a major cholesterol cellular sensor, and its natural ligand 24S-hydroxycholesterol promote the proliferation of DFTD cells via ametabolic switch toward aerobic glycolysis. As a proof of concept of the role of cholesterol homeostasis on DFTD proliferation, we show that atorvastatin, an FDA-approved statin-drug subtype used against human cardiovascular diseases that inhibits cholesterol synthesis, shuts down DFTD energy metabolism and prevents tumor growth in an in vivo DFTD-xenograft model. In conclusion, we show that intervention against cholesterol homeostasis and carbohydrate-dependent energy metabolism by atorvastatin constitutes a feasible biochemical treatment against DFTD, which may assist in the conservation of the Tasmanian devil.

AccesS level

Gold DOAJ

MENTIONS DATA