Metabolic Stress Adaptations Underlie Mammary Gland Morphogenesis and Breast Cancer Progression

Cells. 2021 Oct 2;10(10):2641. doi: 10.3390/cells10102641.

Abstract

Breast cancers display dynamic reprogrammed metabolic activities as cancers develop from premalignant lesions to primary tumors, and then metastasize. Numerous advances focus on how tumors develop pro-proliferative metabolic signaling that differs them from adjacent, non-transformed epithelial tissues. This leads to targetable oncogene-driven liabilities among breast cancer subtypes. Other advances demonstrate how microenvironments trigger stress-response at single-cell resolution. Microenvironmental heterogeneities give rise to cell regulatory states in cancer cell spheroids in three-dimensional cultures and at stratified terminal end buds during mammary gland morphogenesis, where stress and survival signaling juxtapose. The cell-state specificity in stress signaling networks recapture metabolic evolution during cancer progression. Understanding lineage-specific metabolic phenotypes in experimental models is useful for gaining a deeper understanding of subtype-selective breast cancer metabolism.

Keywords: 3D spheroid culture; breast cancer progression; mammary gland morphogenesis; metabolic stress; terminal end bud.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Adaptation, Physiological*
  • Breast Neoplasms / pathology*
  • Disease Progression*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Mammary Glands, Human / growth & development*
  • Mammary Glands, Human / pathology*
  • Morphogenesis*
  • Stress, Physiological*