Metabolite profiling of human renal cell carcinoma reveals tissue-origin dominance in nutrient availability

Elife. 2024 May 24:13:RP95652. doi: 10.7554/eLife.95652.

Abstract

The tumor microenvironment is a determinant of cancer progression and therapeutic efficacy, with nutrient availability playing an important role. Although it is established that the local abundance of specific nutrients defines the metabolic parameters for tumor growth, the factors guiding nutrient availability in tumor compared to normal tissue and blood remain poorly understood. To define these factors in renal cell carcinoma (RCC), we performed quantitative metabolomic and comprehensive lipidomic analyses of tumor interstitial fluid (TIF), adjacent normal kidney interstitial fluid (KIF), and plasma samples collected from patients. TIF nutrient composition closely resembles KIF, suggesting that tissue-specific factors unrelated to the presence of cancer exert a stronger influence on nutrient levels than tumor-driven alterations. Notably, select metabolite changes consistent with known features of RCC metabolism are found in RCC TIF, while glucose levels in TIF are not depleted to levels that are lower than those found in KIF. These findings inform tissue nutrient dynamics in RCC, highlighting a dominant role of non-cancer-driven tissue factors in shaping nutrient availability in these tumors.

Keywords: cancer; cancer biology; human; metabolism; tumor microenvironment.

Plain language summary

Cancer cells convert nutrients into energy differently compared to healthy cells. This difference in metabolism allows them to grow and divide more quickly and sometimes to migrate to different areas of the body. The environment around cancer cells – known as the tumor microenvironment – contains a variety of different cells and blood vessels, which are bathed in interstitial fluid. This microenvironment provides nutrients for the cancer cells to metabolize, and therefore influences how well a tumor grows and how it might respond to treatment. Recent advances with techniques such as mass spectrometry, which can measure the chemical composition of a substance, have allowed scientists to measure nutrient levels in the tumor microenvironments of mice. However, it has been more difficult to conduct such studies in humans, as well as to compare the tumor microenvironment to the healthy tissue the tumors arose from. Abbott, Ali, Reinfeld et al. aimed to fill this gap in knowledge by using mass spectrometry to measure the nutrient levels in the tumor microenvironment of 55 patients undergoing surgery to remove kidney tumors. Comparing the type and levels of nutrients in the tumor interstitial fluid, the neighboring healthy kidney and the blood showed that nutrients in the tumor and healthy kidney were more similar to each other than those in the blood. For example, both the tumor and healthy kidney interstitial fluids contained less glucose than the blood. However, the difference between nutrient composition in the tumor and healthy kidney interstitial fluids was insignificant, suggesting that the healthy kidney and its tumor share a similar environment. Taken together, the findings indicate that kidney cancer cells must adapt to the nutrients available in the kidney, rather than changing what nutrients are available in the tissue. Future studies will be required to investigate whether this finding also applies to other types of cancer. A better understanding of how cancer cells adapt to their environments may aid the development of drugs that aim to disrupt the metabolism of tumors.

MeSH terms

  • Carcinoma, Renal Cell* / blood
  • Carcinoma, Renal Cell* / chemistry
  • Carcinoma, Renal Cell* / pathology
  • Glucose / analysis
  • Humans
  • Kidney / metabolism
  • Kidney / pathology
  • Kidney Neoplasms* / blood
  • Kidney Neoplasms* / chemistry
  • Kidney Neoplasms* / pathology
  • Lipidomics
  • Metabolomics*
  • Principal Component Analysis
  • Tumor Microenvironment*

Substances

  • Glucose