News Release

New study reveals breast cancer cells recycle their own ammonia waste as fuel

Repressing ammonia metabolism stunts tumor growth in mice, findings may inform design of new therapies

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Harvard Medical School

At a glance:

  • Breast cancer cells secrete ammonia as a byproduct of cellular metabolism, which accumulates in the tumor's surrounding environment.
  • New study in mice and cultured tumor cells by Harvard Medical School researchers reveals tumors can use this ammonia as a fuel source.
  • Repressing ammonia metabolism stunts tumor growth in mice.
  • Findings may inform the design of new therapies to slow tumor growth.

Breast cancer cells recycle ammonia, a waste byproduct of cell metabolism, and use it as a source of nitrogen to fuel tumor growth, report scientists from Harvard Medical School in the journal Science.

The findings, published online ahead of print on Oct. 12, show that the presence of ammonia accelerates proliferation of cultured breast cancer cells, while suppressing ammonia metabolism can stunt tumor growth in mice.

The insights shed light on the biological role of ammonia in cancer and may inform the design of new therapeutic strategies to slow tumor growth, the researchers said.

"Classically, ammonia was thought to be metabolic waste that must be cleared due to its high toxicity," said senior study author Marcia Haigis, associate professor of cell biology at HMS. "We found that not only was ammonia not toxic for breast cancer cells, it could be used to feed tumors by serving as a source for the building blocks that tumors need to grow."

Rapidly growing cells, particularly cancer cells, consume nutrients voraciously and generate excess metabolic waste. One such byproduct, ammonia, is normally transported in blood vessels to the liver, where it is converted into less toxic substances and excreted from the body as urea. Tumors, however, have few blood vessels, and as a result, ammonia accumulates in the tumor's local environment at concentrations that would be toxic for many cells.

Tracing Fate

To investigate how tumors cope with high levels of ammonia, Haigis and her colleagues used a technique to label the nitrogen on glutamine. When glutamine is broken down during cell metabolism, ammonia containing labeled nitrogen is released as a byproduct.

Tracing the fate of this marked ammonia, the researchers analyzed more than 200 different cellular metabolites in breast cancer cells and in human tumors transplanted into mice.

They found cancer cells recycled ammonia with high efficiency, incorporating it into numerous components--primarily the amino acid glutamate, a fundamental building block for proteins, as well as its derivatives. Around 20 percent of the cellular glutamate pool contained recycled nitrogen.

Higher concentrations of ammonia appeared to accelerate the growth of lab-grown breast cancer cells. Ammonia-exposed cells doubled up seven hours faster than cells grown without ammonia. In 3-D cultures--a technique that allows cells to divide in all directions as they do inside the body--ammonia exposure increased the number of cells and surface area of cell clusters by up to 50 percent compared with cells grown without ammonia.

Ammonia also accelerated tumor growth and proliferation in mice with transplanted human breast cancer. When the team blocked the activity of glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH)--an enzyme that specifically assimilates ammonia to carry out its function--tumor growth slowed significantly compared to tumors with intact GDH activity.

"We found that repressing ammonia metabolism stunts tumor growth in mice," said Jessica Spinelli, a graduate student in the Haigis lab and first author on the study. "Therefore, inhibition of ammonia assimilation or ammonia production may be rational strategies for therapy design."

The team's findings indicate that the biological role of ammonia should be reevaluated, laying the foundation for the investigation of new approaches to block tumor growth by depriving tumors of essential nutrients. The researchers are now exploring the therapeutic implications of ammonia metabolism in cancer.

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Additional authors on the study include Haejin Yoon and Alison Ringel, who are both postdoctoral researchers in the Haigis lab, as well as Sarah Jeanfavre, research associate, and Clary Clish, director of the Metabolomics Platform, at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard.

The study was supported by the Ludwig Center at Harvard, Glenn Foundation for Medical Research, National Institutes of Health (R01CA213062) and National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program.

Relevant disclosures: Haigis and Spinelli are inventors on patent application HMV- 27560 submitted by Harvard Medical School that covers ammonia utilization in cancer.

About Harvard Medical School

Harvard Medical School (http://hms.harvard.edu) has more than 11,000 faculty working in 10 academic departments located at the School's Boston campus or in hospital-based clinical departments at 15 Harvard-affiliated teaching hospitals and research institutes: Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston Children's Hospital, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Cambridge Health Alliance, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, Hebrew SeniorLife, Joslin Diabetes Center, Judge Baker Children's Center, Massachusetts Eye and Ear/Schepens Eye Research Institute, Massachusetts General Hospital, McLean Hospital, Mount Auburn Hospital, Spaulding Rehabilitation Network and VA Boston Healthcare System.


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