[PDF][PDF] Metabolic reprogramming promotes neural crest migration via Yap/Tead signaling

D Bhattacharya, AP Azambuja, M Simoes-Costa - Developmental cell, 2020 - cell.com
D Bhattacharya, AP Azambuja, M Simoes-Costa
Developmental cell, 2020cell.com
The Warburg effect is one of the metabolic hallmarks of cancer cells, characterized by
enhanced glycolysis even under aerobic conditions. This physiological adaptation is
associated with metastasis, but we still have a superficial understanding of how it affects
cellular processes during embryonic development. Here we report that the neural crest, a
migratory stem cell population in vertebrate embryos, undergoes an extensive metabolic
remodeling to engage in aerobic glycolysis prior to delamination. This increase in glycolytic …
Summary
The Warburg effect is one of the metabolic hallmarks of cancer cells, characterized by enhanced glycolysis even under aerobic conditions. This physiological adaptation is associated with metastasis , but we still have a superficial understanding of how it affects cellular processes during embryonic development. Here we report that the neural crest, a migratory stem cell population in vertebrate embryos, undergoes an extensive metabolic remodeling to engage in aerobic glycolysis prior to delamination. This increase in glycolytic flux promotes Yap/Tead signaling, which activates the expression of a set of transcription factors to drive epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition. Our results demonstrate how shifts in carbon metabolism can trigger the gene regulatory circuits that control complex cell behaviors. These findings support the hypothesis that the Warburg effect is a precisely regulated developmental mechanism that is anomalously reactivated during tumorigenesis and metastasis.
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