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. 2025 Sep 1:627:217636.
doi: 10.1016/j.canlet.2025.217636. Epub 2025 Mar 21.

Lactate accumulation drives hepatocellular carcinoma metastasis through facilitating tumor-derived exosome biogenesis by Rab7A lactylation

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Lactate accumulation drives hepatocellular carcinoma metastasis through facilitating tumor-derived exosome biogenesis by Rab7A lactylation

Chenhao Jiang et al. Cancer Lett. .

Abstract

Previous studies have demonstrated that lactate accumulation, a common hallmark for metabolic deprivation in solid tumors, could actively drive tumor invasion and metastasis. However, whether lactate influences the biogenesis of tumor-derived exosomes (TDEs), the prerequisite for distant metastasis formation, remains unknown. Here, we demonstrated that extracellular lactate, after taken up by tumor cells via lactate transporter MCT1, drove the release of TDE mainly through facilitating multivesicular body (MVB) trafficking towards plasma membrane instead of lysosome. Mechanistically, lactate promoted p300-mediated Rab7A lactylation, which hereafter inhibited its GTPase activity and promoted MVB docking with plasma membrane. Moreover, lactate administration enriched integrin β4 and ECM remodeling-related proteins in TDE cargos, which promoted pulmonary pre-metastatic niche formation. Combinatorial inhibition of MCT1 and p300 significantly abrogated HCC metastasis in a clinical-relevant PDX model. In summary, we demonstrated that lactate promote TDE biogenesis and HCC pulmonary metastasis, and proposed a potential clinical strategy targeting TDEs to prevent HCC metastasis.

Keywords: Extracellular vesicle; HCC; Lactylation; Metastasis; Small GTPases.

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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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