Neoplasia: An International Journal for Oncology Research (Apr 2014)

Mechanisms of buffer therapy resistance

  • Kate M. Bailey,
  • Jonathan W. Wojtkowiak,
  • Heather H. Cornnell,
  • Maria C. Ribeiro,
  • Yoganand Balagurunathan,
  • Arig Ibrahim Hashim,
  • Robert J. Gillies

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neo.2014.04.005
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 4
pp. 354 – 364.e3

Abstract

Read online

Many studies have shown that the acidity of solid tumors contributes to local invasion and metastasis. Oral pH buffers can specifically neutralize the acidic pH of tumors and reduce the incidence of local invasion and metastatic formation in multiple murine models. However, this effect is not universal as we have previously observed that metastasis is not inhibited by buffers in some tumor models, regardless of buffer used. B16-F10 (murine melanoma), LL/2 (murine lung) and HCT116 (human colon) tumors are resistant to treatment with lysine buffer therapy, whereas metastasis is potently inhibited by lysine buffers in MDA-MB-231 (human breast) and PC3M (human prostate) tumors. In the current work, we confirmed that sensitive cells utilized a pH-dependent mechanism for successful metastasis supported by a highly glycolytic phenotype that acidifies the local tumor microenvironment resulting in morphological changes. In contrast, buffer-resistant cell lines exhibited a pH-independent metastatic mechanism involving constitutive secretion of matrix degrading proteases without elevated glycolysis. These results have identified two distinct mechanisms of experimental metastasis, one of which is pH-dependent (buffer therapy sensitive cells) and one which is pH-independent (buffer therapy resistant cells). Further characterization of these models has potential for therapeutic benefit.