Data for: Link between glucose metabolism and EMT drives triple negative breast cancer migratory heterogeneity
Data files
Mar 21, 2023 version files 57.33 MB
Abstract
Intracellular and environmental cues result in heterogeneous cancer cell populations with different metabolic and migratory behaviors. While glucose metabolism and EMT have previously been linked, we aim to understand how this relationship fuels cancer cell migration. We show that while glycolysis drives single-cell migration in confining microtracks, fast and slow cells display different migratory sensitivities to glycolysis and oxidative phosphorylation inhibition. Phenotypic sorting of highly and weakly migratory subpopulations (MDA+, MDA-) reveals that more mesenchymal, highly migratory MDA+ preferentially use glycolysis while more epithelial, weakly migratory MDA- utilize mitochondrial respiration. These phenotypes are plastic and MDA+ can be made less glycolytic, mesenchymal, and migratory and MDA- can be made more glycolytic, mesenchymal, and migratory via modulation of glucose metabolism or EMT. These findings reveal an intrinsic link between EMT and glucose metabolism that controls migration. Identifying mechanisms fueling phenotypic heterogeneity is essential to develop targeted metastatic therapeutics.
Methods
Data was collected using equipment and materials in the Reinhart-King lab. Studies were conducted as described in STAR Methods section of publication. Data were processed using Fiji/ImageJ and recorded in Excel.
Usage notes
Microsoft excel is required.