Lipid droplet turnover at the lysosome inhibits growth of hepatocellular carcinoma in a BNIP3-dependent manner

Menée à l'aide de lignées cellulaires de carcinome hépatocellulaire et de modèles murins, cette étude met en évidence un mécanisme par lequel la protéine BNIP3, en favorisant le renouvellement des gouttelettes lipidiques au niveau des lysosomes, inhibe la croissance tumorale

Science Advances, Volume 8, Numéro 41, Page eabo2510, 2022, article en libre accès

Résumé en anglais

Hepatic steatosis is a major etiological factor in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), but factors causing lipid accumulation leading to HCC are not understood. We identify BNIP3 (a mitochondrial cargo receptor) as an HCC suppressor that mitigates against lipid accumulation to attenuate tumor cell growth. Targeted deletion of Bnip3 decreased tumor latency and increased tumor burden in a mouse model of HCC. This was associated with increased lipid in bnip3?/? HCC at early stages of disease, while lipid did not accumulate until later in tumorigenesis in wild-type mice, as Bnip3 expression was attenuated. Low BNIP3 expression in human HCC similarly correlated with increased lipid content and worse prognosis than HCC expressing high BNIP3. BNIP3 suppressed HCC cell growth by promoting lipid droplet turnover at the lysosome in a manner dependent on BNIP3 binding LC3. We have termed this process ?mitolipophagy? because it involves the coordinated autophagic degradation of lipid droplets with mitochondria. Lipid droplet turnover with mitochondria in ?mitolipophagy? requires BNIP3 and is disrupted in hepatocellular carcinoma.