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Integrating the tissue-specificity and chronology of hereditary renal cancer predisposition

Descripción del proyecto

Mecanismo de carcinogénesis en la leiomiomatosis hereditaria y el carcinoma de células renales

Las mutaciones de las enzimas del ciclo del ácido tricarboxílico de las mitocondrias predisponen al cáncer, lo que apunta a la hipótesis de que el metabolismo desregulado puede generar carcinogénesis. Las mutaciones en la fumarato hidratasa (FH) provocan leiomiomatosis hereditaria y carcinoma de células renales (LHCCR), que se caracteriza por la acumulación de fumarato, tumores cutáneos y uterinos y cáncer de riñón. Sin embargo, se desconocen los mecanismos por los que se produce la pérdida de FH y la acumulación de fumarato. El proyecto ONCOFUM, financiado con fondos europeos, aspira a arrojar luz sobre los mecanismos que sustentan la carcinogénesis específica de tejidos en la LHCCR. Los investigadores crearán un modelo murino con FH desactivada en varios tejidos y dilucidarán la consiguiente reprogramación específica de los tejidos. También estudiarán, con modelos celulares, las consecuencias moleculares de la pérdida de FH y realizarán un análisis de tumores de LHCCR para descubrir herramientas de diagnóstico y pronóstico y nuevas dianas antineoplásicas.

Objetivo

Cancer cells undergo profound metabolic changes. However, little is known about whether and how metabolic changes drive cancer. The discovery that mutations of Tricarboxylic Acid (TCA) cycle enzymes in mitochondria predispose to cancer gives evidence that dysregulated metabolism could drive tumorigenesis. Amongst these, mutations in Fumarate Hydratase (FH) cause Hereditary Leiomyomatosis and Renal Cell Cancer (HLRCC), characterised by tumours of the skin and uterus, and renal cancer. Patients inherit one mutated copy of FH and loss of the wild-type (wt) allele occurs in tumours. Fumarate accumulation is the defining biochemical feature of these tumours. However, the mechanisms by which FH loss and fumarate accumulation lead to these tumours is unclear.
In ONCOFUM, I want to elucidate the mechanisms that underpin tissue-specific tumorigenesis in HLRCC. I hypothesise that HLRCC occurs via a two-step process. Initially, loss of the wt allele in carriers of a FH mutation leads to FH deficiency. However, most of these cells die and only cells in tissues with the appropriate metabolic hardware survive. In the second step, FH loss in permissive tissues leads to phenotypic changes that lead to cancer. To assess this hypothesis, we will generate a mouse model where we inactivate FH in multiple tissues and elucidate the ensuing tissue-specific reprogramming. Then, using cellular models, we will investigate the molecular consequences of FH loss. In parallel, we will perform a comprehensive analysis of HLRCC tumours to find diagnostic and prognostic tools, and new anticancer targets, which will be validated in vitro and in vivo.
The experimental framework developed in ONCOFUM will give unparalleled molecular insights into how cancer develops in different tissues in response to loss of FH and will lead to new therapeutic strategies for HLRCC, and, more generally for the many other cancers to which metabolic reprogramming contributes.

Régimen de financiación

ERC-COG - Consolidator Grant

Institución de acogida

KLINIKUM DER UNIVERSITAET ZU KOELN
Aportación neta de la UEn
€ 1 339 814,62
Dirección
Kerpener Strasse 62
50937 Koeln
Alemania

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Región
Nordrhein-Westfalen Köln Köln, Kreisfreie Stadt
Tipo de actividad
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Enlaces
Coste total
€ 1 339 814,62

Beneficiarios (2)