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. 2025 Aug 28.
doi: 10.1038/s43018-025-01038-6. Online ahead of print.

MIRO2-mediated mitochondrial transfer from cancer cells induces cancer-associated fibroblast differentiation

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MIRO2-mediated mitochondrial transfer from cancer cells induces cancer-associated fibroblast differentiation

Michael Cangkrama et al. Nat Cancer. .

Abstract

Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) are key components of the tumor microenvironment that commonly support cancer development and progression. Here we show that different cancer cells transfer mitochondria to fibroblasts in cocultures and xenograft tumors, thereby inducing protumorigenic CAF features. Transplantation of functional mitochondria from cancer cells induces metabolic alterations in fibroblasts, expression of CAF markers and release of a protumorigenic secretome and matrisome. These features promote tumor formation in preclinical mouse models. Mechanistically, the mitochondrial transfer requires the mitochondrial trafficking protein MIRO2. Its depletion in cancer cells suppresses mitochondrial transfer and inhibits CAF differentiation and tumor growth. The clinical relevance of these findings is reflected by the overexpression of MIRO2 in tumor cells at the leading edge of epithelial skin cancers. These results identify mitochondrial transfer from cancer cells to fibroblasts as a driver of tumorigenesis and provide a rationale for targeting MIRO2 and mitochondrial transfer in different malignancies.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests.

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