posted on 2023-04-03, 19:42authored byMyriam Cerezo-Magaña, Helena C. Christianson, Toin H. van Kuppevelt, Karin Forsberg-Nilsson, Mattias Belting
High-resolution Airyscan live-cell confocal microscopy visualization of LD dynamics during reoxygenation. LD+ hypoxic glioma cells were imaged during 3 h of reoxygenation. The sequence was captured at 20 min interval during 3 h. Scale bar, 20 µm.
Funding
Cancerfonden
Vetenskapsrådet
Swedish Childhood Cancer Foundation
Mrs. Berta Kamprad Foundation
Skane County Council's Research and Development Foundation
History
ARTICLE ABSTRACT
As an adaptive response to hypoxic stress, aggressive tumors rewire their metabolic phenotype into increased malignant behavior through extracellular lipid scavenging and storage in lipid droplets (LD). However, the underlying mechanisms and potential lipid source retrieved in the hypoxic tumor microenvironment remain poorly understood. Here, we show that exosome-like extracellular vesicles (EV), known as influential messengers in the tumor microenvironment, may also serve anabolic functions by transforming hypoxic, patient-derived human glioblastoma cell lines into the LD+ phenotype. EVs were internalized via a hypoxia-sensitive, endocytic mechanism that fueled LD formation through direct lipid transfer, and independently of fatty acid synthase activity. EVs can enter cells through multiple and yet ill-defined pathways. On a mechanistic level, we found that hypoxia-mediated EV uptake depends on increased heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) endocytosis that preferentially followed the lipid raft pathway. The functional relevance of HSPG was evidenced by the reversal of EV-mediated LD loading by targeting of HSPG receptor function.
Together, our data extend the multifaceted role of EVs in cancer biology by showing their LD-inducing capacity in hypoxic glioma cells. Moreover, these findings highlight a potential function for HSPG-mediated endocytosis as a salvage pathway for EV retrieval during tumor stress conditions.