Hormone-independent breast and prostate cancers represent highly aggressive malignancies characterized by profound metabolic reprogramming, elevated oxidative stress, and loss of sensitivity to endocrine therapies. Increasing evidence indicates that tumor progression and metabolic plasticity are sustained by interconnected signaling networks linking transcriptional regulation to energy metabolism. Among these, the STAT3-PKM2-HIF-1 alpha signaling axis, functionally reinforced by reactive oxygen species (ROS), has been proposed as a central regulator of the Warburg phenotype and cellular adaptation to adverse microenvironmental conditions. Using androgen-independent prostate cancer (DU145) and triple-negative breast cancer (KPL-4) cell lines, we demonstrated constitutive activation and reciprocal regulation of STAT3, PKM2, and HIF-1 alpha. Pharmacological inhibition of STAT3, stabilization of tetrameric PKM2 by L-serine, and ROS scavenging with N-acetylcysteine significantly reduced STAT3 phosphorylation, PKM2 nuclear translocation, and HIF-1 alpha stabilization. These molecular effects were accompanied by decreased intracellular ROS levels, reduced lactate production, increased pyruvate levels, and a metabolic shift toward oxidative phosphorylation. Functionally, treated cells exhibited reduced Ki-67 expression and impaired clonogenic capacity. Our results identify the STAT3-PKM2-HIF-1 alpha/ROS axis as a key determinant of metabolic and phenotypic plasticity in hormone-independent breast and prostate cancers, highlighting its potential as a molecular target for therapeutic modulation of cancer-associated metabolic phenotypes.

ROS-Fueled Allies: STAT3, PKM2, and HIF-1α Influencing Energy Metabolism in Hormone-Independent Cancers / Fiorini, S.; Maras, B.; Mignogna, G.; Perugini, M.; Retali, F.; Meschiari, G.; Macone, A.; Botta, S.; Altieri, F.; Eufemi, M.; Minacori, M.. - In: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES. - ISSN 1422-0067. - 27:5(2026). [10.3390/ijms27052357]

ROS-Fueled Allies: STAT3, PKM2, and HIF-1α Influencing Energy Metabolism in Hormone-Independent Cancers

Fiorini S.
Primo
Conceptualization
;
Maras B.
Secondo
Validation
;
Mignogna G.
Validation
;
Retali F.
Investigation
;
Meschiari G.
Methodology
;
Macone A.
Methodology
;
Botta S.
Methodology
;
Altieri F.
Supervision
;
Eufemi M.
Penultimo
Project Administration
;
2026

Abstract

Hormone-independent breast and prostate cancers represent highly aggressive malignancies characterized by profound metabolic reprogramming, elevated oxidative stress, and loss of sensitivity to endocrine therapies. Increasing evidence indicates that tumor progression and metabolic plasticity are sustained by interconnected signaling networks linking transcriptional regulation to energy metabolism. Among these, the STAT3-PKM2-HIF-1 alpha signaling axis, functionally reinforced by reactive oxygen species (ROS), has been proposed as a central regulator of the Warburg phenotype and cellular adaptation to adverse microenvironmental conditions. Using androgen-independent prostate cancer (DU145) and triple-negative breast cancer (KPL-4) cell lines, we demonstrated constitutive activation and reciprocal regulation of STAT3, PKM2, and HIF-1 alpha. Pharmacological inhibition of STAT3, stabilization of tetrameric PKM2 by L-serine, and ROS scavenging with N-acetylcysteine significantly reduced STAT3 phosphorylation, PKM2 nuclear translocation, and HIF-1 alpha stabilization. These molecular effects were accompanied by decreased intracellular ROS levels, reduced lactate production, increased pyruvate levels, and a metabolic shift toward oxidative phosphorylation. Functionally, treated cells exhibited reduced Ki-67 expression and impaired clonogenic capacity. Our results identify the STAT3-PKM2-HIF-1 alpha/ROS axis as a key determinant of metabolic and phenotypic plasticity in hormone-independent breast and prostate cancers, highlighting its potential as a molecular target for therapeutic modulation of cancer-associated metabolic phenotypes.
2026
HIF-1α; PKM2; STAT3; Warburg effect; energy metabolism; hormone-resistant cancer; oxidative stress
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
ROS-Fueled Allies: STAT3, PKM2, and HIF-1α Influencing Energy Metabolism in Hormone-Independent Cancers / Fiorini, S.; Maras, B.; Mignogna, G.; Perugini, M.; Retali, F.; Meschiari, G.; Macone, A.; Botta, S.; Altieri, F.; Eufemi, M.; Minacori, M.. - In: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES. - ISSN 1422-0067. - 27:5(2026). [10.3390/ijms27052357]
File allegati a questo prodotto
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1766318
 Attenzione

Attenzione! I dati visualizzati non sono stati sottoposti a validazione da parte dell'ateneo

Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 0
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 0
social impact