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Dive into the research topics where Samuel E. Weinberg is active.

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Featured researches published by Samuel E. Weinberg.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Mitochondrial metabolism and ROS generation are essential for Kras-mediated tumorigenicity.

Frank Weinberg; Robert B. Hamanaka; William W. Wheaton; Samuel E. Weinberg; Joy Joseph; Marcos Lopez; B. Kalyanaraman; Gökhan M. Mutlu; G. R. Scott Budinger; Navdeep S. Chandel

Otto Warburgs theory on the origins of cancer postulates that tumor cells have defects in mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation and therefore rely on high levels of aerobic glycolysis as the major source of ATP to fuel cellular proliferation (the Warburg effect). This is in contrast to normal cells, which primarily utilize oxidative phosphorylation for growth and survival. Here we report that the major function of glucose metabolism for Kras-induced anchorage-independent growth, a hallmark of transformed cells, is to support the pentose phosphate pathway. The major function of glycolytic ATP is to support growth under hypoxic conditions. Glutamine conversion into the tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediate alpha-ketoglutarate through glutaminase and alanine aminotransferase is essential for Kras-induced anchorage-independent growth. Mitochondrial metabolism allows for the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) which are required for Kras-induced anchorage-independent growth through regulation of the ERK MAPK signaling pathway. We show that the major source of ROS generation required for anchorage-independent growth is the Qo site of mitochondrial complex III. Furthermore, disruption of mitochondrial function by loss of the mitochondrial transcription factor A (TFAM) gene reduced tumorigenesis in an oncogenic Kras-driven mouse model of lung cancer. These results demonstrate that mitochondrial metabolism and mitochondrial ROS generation are essential for Kras-induced cell proliferation and tumorigenesis.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2015

Targeting mitochondria metabolism for cancer therapy

Samuel E. Weinberg; Navdeep S. Chandel

Mitochondria have a well-recognized role in the production of ATP and the intermediates needed for macromolecule biosynthesis, such as nucleotides. Mitochondria also participate in the activation of signaling pathways. Overall, accumulating evidence now suggests that mitochondrial bioenergetics, biosynthesis and signaling are required for tumorigenesis. Thus, emerging studies have begun to demonstrate that mitochondrial metabolism is potentially a fruitful arena for cancer therapy. In this Perspective, we highlight recent developments in targeting mitochondrial metabolism for the treatment of cancer.


eLife | 2014

Metformin inhibits mitochondrial complex I of cancer cells to reduce tumorigenesis

William W. Wheaton; Samuel E. Weinberg; Robert B. Hamanaka; Saul Soberanes; Lucas B. Sullivan; Elena Anso; Andrea Glasauer; Eric Dufour; Gökhan M. Mutlu; Gr Scott Budigner; Navdeep S. Chandel

Recent epidemiological and laboratory-based studies suggest that the anti-diabetic drug metformin prevents cancer progression. How metformin diminishes tumor growth is not fully understood. In this study, we report that in human cancer cells, metformin inhibits mitochondrial complex I (NADH dehydrogenase) activity and cellular respiration. Metformin inhibited cellular proliferation in the presence of glucose, but induced cell death upon glucose deprivation, indicating that cancer cells rely exclusively on glycolysis for survival in the presence of metformin. Metformin also reduced hypoxic activation of hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1). All of these effects of metformin were reversed when the metformin-resistant Saccharomyces cerevisiae NADH dehydrogenase NDI1 was overexpressed. In vivo, the administration of metformin to mice inhibited the growth of control human cancer cells but not those expressing NDI1. Thus, we have demonstrated that metformins inhibitory effects on cancer progression are cancer cell autonomous and depend on its ability to inhibit mitochondrial complex I. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02242.001


Immunity | 2015

Mitochondria in the regulation of innate and adaptive immunity

Samuel E. Weinberg; Laura A. Sena; Navdeep S. Chandel

Mitochondria are well appreciated for their role as biosynthetic and bioenergetic organelles. In the past two decades, mitochondria have emerged as signaling organelles that contribute critical decisions about cell proliferation, death, and differentiation. Mitochondria not only sustain immune cell phenotypes but also are necessary for establishing immune cell phenotype and their function. Mitochondria can rapidly switch from primarily being catabolic organelles generating ATP to anabolic organelles that generate both ATP and building blocks for macromolecule synthesis. This enables them to fulfill appropriate metabolic demands of different immune cells. Mitochondria have multiple mechanisms that allow them to activate signaling pathways in the cytosol including altering in AMP/ATP ratio, the release of ROS and TCA cycle metabolites, as well as the localization of immune regulatory proteins on the outer mitochondrial membrane. In this Review, we discuss the evidence and mechanisms that mitochondrial dependent signaling controls innate and adaptive immune responses.


Molecular Cell | 2016

TCA Cycle and Mitochondrial Membrane Potential Are Necessary for Diverse Biological Functions

Inmaculada Martínez-Reyes; Lauren Diebold; Hyewon Kong; Michael Schieber; He Huang; Christopher T. Hensley; Manan Mehta; Tianyuan Wang; Janine H. Santos; Richard P. Woychik; Eric Dufour; Johannes N. Spelbrink; Samuel E. Weinberg; Yingming Zhao; Ralph J. DeBerardinis; Navdeep S. Chandel

Mitochondrial metabolism is necessary for the maintenance of oxidative TCA cycle function and mitochondrial membrane potential. Previous attempts to decipher whether mitochondria are necessary for biological outcomes have been hampered by genetic and pharmacologic methods that simultaneously disrupt multiple functions linked to mitochondrial metabolism. Here, we report that inducible depletion of mitochondrial DNA (ρ(ο) cells) diminished respiration, oxidative TCA cycle function, and the mitochondrial membrane potential, resulting in diminished cell proliferation, hypoxic activation of HIF-1, and specific histone acetylation marks. Genetic reconstitution only of the oxidative TCA cycle function specifically in these inducible ρ(ο) cells restored metabolites, resulting in re-establishment of histone acetylation. In contrast, genetic reconstitution of the mitochondrial membrane potential restored ROS, which were necessary for hypoxic activation of HIF-1 and cell proliferation. These results indicate that distinct mitochondrial functions associated with respiration are necessary for cell proliferation, epigenetics, and HIF-1 activation.


Cell Metabolism | 2016

Are Metformin Doses Used in Murine Cancer Models Clinically Relevant

Navdeep S. Chandel; Dania Avizonis; Colleen R. Reczek; Samuel E. Weinberg; Stephan Menz; Roland Neuhaus; Sven Christian; Andrea Haegebarth; Carolyn Algire; Michael Pollak

An important mechanism of action of metformin as an antidiabetic drug involves inhibition of hepatic gluconeogenesis, but the molecular basis for this is controversial. A recent perspective (He and Wondisford, 2015) argued that direct action of the drug on AMPK is of key importance and occurs at clinically relevant concentrations of ∼70 μM. However, that review cited conflicting studies, which concluded either that AMPK-independent mechanisms are important in metformin action, or that AMPK activation plays a role but is secondary to energetic stress resulting from inhibition of oxidative phosphorylation by the drug.


Nature Cell Biology | 2017

The mitochondrial respiratory chain is essential for haematopoietic stem cell function

Elena Anso; Samuel E. Weinberg; Lauren Diebold; Benjamin J. Thompson; Sébastien Malinge; Paul T. Schumacker; Xin Liu; Yuannyu Zhang; Zhen Shao; Mya Steadman; Kelly Marsh; Jian Xu; John D. Crispino; Navdeep S. Chandel

Adult and fetal haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) display a glycolytic phenotype, which is required for maintenance of stemness; however, whether mitochondrial respiration is required to maintain HSC function is not known. Here we report that loss of the mitochondrial complex III subunit Rieske iron-sulfur protein (RISP) in fetal mouse HSCs allows them to proliferate but impairs their differentiation, resulting in anaemia and prenatal death. RISP-null fetal HSCs displayed impaired respiration resulting in a decreased NAD+/NADH ratio. RISP-null fetal HSCs and progenitors exhibited an increase in both DNA and histone methylation associated with increases in 2-hydroxyglutarate (2HG), a metabolite known to inhibit DNA and histone demethylases. RISP inactivation in adult HSCs also impaired respiration resulting in loss of quiescence concomitant with severe pancytopenia and lethality. Thus, respiration is dispensable for adult or fetal HSC proliferation, but essential for fetal HSC differentiation and maintenance of adult HSC quiescence.


Nature Reviews Immunology | 2017

Mitochondrial control of immunity: beyond ATP

Manan Mehta; Samuel E. Weinberg; Navdeep S. Chandel

Mitochondria are important signalling organelles, and they dictate immunological fate. From T cells to macrophages, mitochondria form the nexus of the various metabolic pathways that define each immune cell subset. In this central position, mitochondria help to control the various metabolic decision points that determine immune cell function. In this Review, we discuss how mitochondrial metabolism varies across different immune cell subsets, how metabolic signalling dictates cell fate and how this signalling could potentially be targeted therapeutically.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Label-free imaging of the native, living cellular nanoarchitecture using partial-wave spectroscopic microscopy

Luay M. Almassalha; Greta M. Bauer; John E. Chandler; Scott Gladstein; Lusik Cherkezyan; Yolanda Stypula-Cyrus; Samuel E. Weinberg; Di Zhang; Peder Thusgaard Ruhoff; Hemant K. Roy; Hariharan Subramanian; Navdeep S. Chandel; Igal Szleifer; Vadim Backman

Significance Chromatin is one of the most critical structures within the cell because it houses most genetic information. Its structure is well understood at the nucleosomal (<20-nm) and chromosomal (>200-nm) levels; however, due to the lack of quantitative imaging modalities to study this organization, little is known about the higher-order structure between these length scales in live cells. We present a label-free technique, live-cell partial-wave spectroscopic (PWS) microscopy, with sensitivity to structures between 20 and 200 nm that can quantify the nanoarchitecture in live cells. With this technique, we can detect DNA fragmentation and expand on the link between metabolic function and higher-order chromatin structure. Live-cell PWS allows high-throughput study of the relationship between nanoscale organization and molecular function. The organization of chromatin is a regulator of molecular processes including transcription, replication, and DNA repair. The structures within chromatin that regulate these processes span from the nucleosomal (10-nm) to the chromosomal (>200-nm) levels, with little known about the dynamics of chromatin structure between these scales due to a lack of quantitative imaging technique in live cells. Previous work using partial-wave spectroscopic (PWS) microscopy, a quantitative imaging technique with sensitivity to macromolecular organization between 20 and 200 nm, has shown that transformation of chromatin at these length scales is a fundamental event during carcinogenesis. As the dynamics of chromatin likely play a critical regulatory role in cellular function, it is critical to develop live-cell imaging techniques that can probe the real-time temporal behavior of the chromatin nanoarchitecture. Therefore, we developed a live-cell PWS technique that allows high-throughput, label-free study of the causal relationship between nanoscale organization and molecular function in real time. In this work, we use live-cell PWS to study the change in chromatin structure due to DNA damage and expand on the link between metabolic function and the structure of higher-order chromatin. In particular, we studied the temporal changes to chromatin during UV light exposure, show that live-cell DNA-binding dyes induce damage to chromatin within seconds, and demonstrate a direct link between higher-order chromatin structure and mitochondrial membrane potential. Because biological function is tightly paired with structure, live-cell PWS is a powerful tool to study the nanoscale structure–function relationship in live cells.


Cell Reports | 2016

The Mitochondrial Respiratory Chain Is Required for Organismal Adaptation to Hypoxia

Robert B. Hamanaka; Samuel E. Weinberg; Colleen R. Reczek; Navdeep S. Chandel

Hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs) are crucial for cellular and organismal adaptation to hypoxia. The mitochondrial respiratory chain is the largest consumer of oxygen in most mammalian cells; however, it is unknown whether the respiratory chain is necessary for in vivo activation of HIFs and organismal adaptation to hypoxia. HIF-1 activation in the epidermis has been shown to be a key regulator of the organismal response to hypoxic conditions, including renal production of erythropoietin (Epo). Therefore, we conditionally deleted expression of TFAM in mouse epidermal keratinocytes. TFAM is required for maintenance of the mitochondrial genome, and TFAM-null cells are respiratory deficient. TFAM loss in epidermal keratinocytes reduced epidermal levels of HIF-1α protein and diminished the hypoxic induction of HIF-dependent transcription in epidermis. Furthermore, epidermal TFAM deficiency impaired hypoxic induction of renal Epo expression. Our results demonstrate that the mitochondrial respiratory chain is essential for in vivo HIF activation and organismal adaptation to hypoxia.

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Manan Mehta

Northwestern University

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Elena Anso

Northwestern University

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Jian Xu

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Ralph J. DeBerardinis

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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