Sequestration of 9-Hydroxystearic Acid in FAHFA (Fatty Acid Esters of Hydroxy Fatty Acids) as a Protective Mechanism for Colon Carcinoma Cells to Avoid Apoptotic Cell Death
Fecha
2019-04-12Autor
Rodríguez, Juan Pablo
Guijas, Carlos
Astudillo, Alma María
Rubio, Julio Miguel
Balboa García, María Ángeles
Balsinde, Jesús
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Hydroxy fatty acids are known to cause cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. The best studied of
them, 9-hydroxystearic acid (9-HSA), induces apoptosis in cell lines by acting through mechanisms
involving di erent targets. Using mass spectrometry-based lipidomic approaches, we show in this
study that 9-HSA levels in human colorectal tumors are diminished when compared with normal
adjacent tissue. Since this decrease could be compatible with an escape mechanism of tumors from
9-HSA-induced apoptosis, we investigated di erent features of the utilization of this hydroxyfatty
acid in colon. We show that in colorectal tumors and related cell lines such as HT-29 and HCT-116,
9-HSA is the only hydroxyfatty acid constituent of branched fatty acid esters of hydroxyfatty acids
(FAHFA), a novel family of lipids with anti-inflammatory properties. Importantly, FAHFA levels in
tumors are elevated compared with normal tissue and, unlike 9-HSA, they do not induce apoptosis
of colorectal cell lines over a wide range of concentrations. Further, the addition of 9-HSA to colon
cancer cell lines augments the synthesis of di erent FAHFA before the cells commit to apoptosis,
suggesting that FAHFA formation may function as a bu er system that sequesters the hydroxyacid
into an inactive form, thereby restricting apoptosis.
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