Metabolic reprogramming, malignant transformation and metastasis: Lessons from chronic lymphocytic leukaemia and prostate cancer
- PMID: 39755364
- DOI: 10.1016/j.canlet.2025.217441
Metabolic reprogramming, malignant transformation and metastasis: Lessons from chronic lymphocytic leukaemia and prostate cancer
Abstract
Metabolic reprogramming is a hallmark of cancer, crucial for malignant transformation and metastasis. Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) and prostate cancer exhibit similar metabolic adaptations, particularly in glucose and lipid metabolism. Understanding this metabolic plasticity is crucial for identifying mechanisms contributing to metastasis. This review considers glucose and lipid metabolism in CLL and prostate cancer, exploring their roles in healthy and malignant states and during disease progression. In CLL, lipid metabolism supports cell survival and migration, with aggressive disease characterised by increased fatty acid oxidation and altered sphingolipids. Richter's transformation and aggressive lymphoma, however, exhibit a metabolic shift towards increased glycolysis. Similarly, prostate cell metabolism is unique, relying on citrate production in the healthy state and undergoing metabolic reprogramming during malignant transformation. Early-stage prostate cancer cells increase lipid synthesis and uptake, and decrease glycolysis, whereas metastatic cells re-adopt glucose metabolism, likely driven by interactions with the tumour microenvironment. Genetic drivers including TP53 and ATM mutations connect metabolic alterations to disease severity in these two malignancies. The bone microenvironment supports the metabolic demands of these malignancies, serving as an initiation niche for CLL and a homing site for prostate cancer metastases. By comparing these malignancies, this review underscores the importance of metabolic plasticity in cancer progression and highlights how CLL and prostate cancer may be models of circulating and solid tumours more broadly. The metabolic phenotypes throughout cancer cell transformation and metastasis, and the microenvironment in which these processes occur, present opportunities for interventions that could disrupt metastatic processes and improve patient outcomes.
Keywords: Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia; Malignant transformation; Metabolic reprogramming; Metastasis; Microenvironment; Prostate cancer.
Copyright © 2025 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
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