Metabolic regulation and consequences of an altered microenvironment in cancer cell lines

Tumours are commonly associated with a shift in cellular metabolism to establish an acidic microenvironment that is further exacerbated by hypoxia. Such changes in extracellular pH (pHe) and oxygen tension (PO2) alter ion homeostasis effecting cancer hallmarks. High intracellular potassium (K+) is a...

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Main Author: Bose, Ujjal
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55919/
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author Bose, Ujjal
author_facet Bose, Ujjal
author_sort Bose, Ujjal
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Tumours are commonly associated with a shift in cellular metabolism to establish an acidic microenvironment that is further exacerbated by hypoxia. Such changes in extracellular pH (pHe) and oxygen tension (PO2) alter ion homeostasis effecting cancer hallmarks. High intracellular potassium (K+) is a key determinant of membrane potential driving cellular function including proliferation and migration. Cancer cells overexpress several K+ channel subtypes, modulated by metabolic factors including pHe. We hypothesise that acidic and hypoxic microenvironment affects cancer cell behaviour mediated, in part, by K+ transport involving K+ channels. We aimed to develop and test the effects of a normal microenvironment (pHe 7.4; PO2 0.21 atm) and modified (low pHe 6.3; low PO2 0.029 atm) culture conditions on K+ channel gene expression (by qPCR) and their contributions to cell proliferation in the SK-OV-3, MCF-7 and OE-19 cancer cell lines. Altered pHe predominantly affected gene expression of pH-sensitive (KCNK9 (TASK-3); KCNK17 (TALK-2)) and voltage-gated (KCNH1 (eag); KCNH2 (HERG)) K+ channels in SK-OV-3 cells. TASK-3 channel expression was upregulated in low pHe & PO2 compared with normal pHe & PO2 (P < 0.05). mRNA expression for KCNH1 and KCNH2 was decreased in low pHe compared with normal pHe & PO2 for all three cell lines tested. Cell proliferation of SK-OV-3 cells was inhibited by the TASK-3 blocker methanandamide and the HERG blocker, E4031, most significantly in low pHe & PO2. Live-cell imaging methods deploying pH-sensitive (BCECF-AM, carboxy-SNARF-AM, pH nanosensor) fluorophores and the K+-sensitive (nigericin) ionophore were also developed and optimised in order to study the cellular responses of cancer cells following acid loading using the ammonium pre-pulse method. Values for the Intrinsic Buffering Capacity (βI), steady state pHi recovery and net acid extrusion (NAE) of SK-OV-3 and MCF-7 cells in response to altered pHe & PO2 were derived. Results demonstrated that SK-OV-3 cells had lower buffering capacity in acidic pHe than MCF-7 cells. In altered pHe & PO2, NaHCO3-dependent (extrinsic) buffering promoted recovery of pHi from acute acidification (P < 0.001) in both SK-OV-3 and MCF-7 cells. Low pHe & PO2 culture conditions significantly enhanced βI as reflected through increased NAE of cancer cells. Finally, altered K+ flux under low pHe & PO2 appeared to involve TASK-3 channels as shown by inhibition with methanandamide in SK-OV-3 and MCF-7 cells. Cancer cell behaviour is modified by an acidic, low oxygen microenvironment, in part involving the TASK-3 channel. These inferences are based on culture methodology developed in this study that will emerge as pivotal for future investigations of the role of these channels in response to the cancer environment.
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spelling nottingham-559192025-02-28T14:21:55Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55919/ Metabolic regulation and consequences of an altered microenvironment in cancer cell lines Bose, Ujjal Tumours are commonly associated with a shift in cellular metabolism to establish an acidic microenvironment that is further exacerbated by hypoxia. Such changes in extracellular pH (pHe) and oxygen tension (PO2) alter ion homeostasis effecting cancer hallmarks. High intracellular potassium (K+) is a key determinant of membrane potential driving cellular function including proliferation and migration. Cancer cells overexpress several K+ channel subtypes, modulated by metabolic factors including pHe. We hypothesise that acidic and hypoxic microenvironment affects cancer cell behaviour mediated, in part, by K+ transport involving K+ channels. We aimed to develop and test the effects of a normal microenvironment (pHe 7.4; PO2 0.21 atm) and modified (low pHe 6.3; low PO2 0.029 atm) culture conditions on K+ channel gene expression (by qPCR) and their contributions to cell proliferation in the SK-OV-3, MCF-7 and OE-19 cancer cell lines. Altered pHe predominantly affected gene expression of pH-sensitive (KCNK9 (TASK-3); KCNK17 (TALK-2)) and voltage-gated (KCNH1 (eag); KCNH2 (HERG)) K+ channels in SK-OV-3 cells. TASK-3 channel expression was upregulated in low pHe & PO2 compared with normal pHe & PO2 (P < 0.05). mRNA expression for KCNH1 and KCNH2 was decreased in low pHe compared with normal pHe & PO2 for all three cell lines tested. Cell proliferation of SK-OV-3 cells was inhibited by the TASK-3 blocker methanandamide and the HERG blocker, E4031, most significantly in low pHe & PO2. Live-cell imaging methods deploying pH-sensitive (BCECF-AM, carboxy-SNARF-AM, pH nanosensor) fluorophores and the K+-sensitive (nigericin) ionophore were also developed and optimised in order to study the cellular responses of cancer cells following acid loading using the ammonium pre-pulse method. Values for the Intrinsic Buffering Capacity (βI), steady state pHi recovery and net acid extrusion (NAE) of SK-OV-3 and MCF-7 cells in response to altered pHe & PO2 were derived. Results demonstrated that SK-OV-3 cells had lower buffering capacity in acidic pHe than MCF-7 cells. In altered pHe & PO2, NaHCO3-dependent (extrinsic) buffering promoted recovery of pHi from acute acidification (P < 0.001) in both SK-OV-3 and MCF-7 cells. Low pHe & PO2 culture conditions significantly enhanced βI as reflected through increased NAE of cancer cells. Finally, altered K+ flux under low pHe & PO2 appeared to involve TASK-3 channels as shown by inhibition with methanandamide in SK-OV-3 and MCF-7 cells. Cancer cell behaviour is modified by an acidic, low oxygen microenvironment, in part involving the TASK-3 channel. These inferences are based on culture methodology developed in this study that will emerge as pivotal for future investigations of the role of these channels in response to the cancer environment. 2019-07-19 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55919/1/Ujjal%20Bose_4181919_PhD%20Thesis.pdf Bose, Ujjal (2019) Metabolic regulation and consequences of an altered microenvironment in cancer cell lines. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Microenvironment Intracellular pH Hypoxia TASK-3 Proliferation Acid extrusion
spellingShingle Microenvironment
Intracellular pH
Hypoxia
TASK-3
Proliferation
Acid extrusion
Bose, Ujjal
Metabolic regulation and consequences of an altered microenvironment in cancer cell lines
title Metabolic regulation and consequences of an altered microenvironment in cancer cell lines
title_full Metabolic regulation and consequences of an altered microenvironment in cancer cell lines
title_fullStr Metabolic regulation and consequences of an altered microenvironment in cancer cell lines
title_full_unstemmed Metabolic regulation and consequences of an altered microenvironment in cancer cell lines
title_short Metabolic regulation and consequences of an altered microenvironment in cancer cell lines
title_sort metabolic regulation and consequences of an altered microenvironment in cancer cell lines
topic Microenvironment
Intracellular pH
Hypoxia
TASK-3
Proliferation
Acid extrusion
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55919/