Stromal cell oxidation: A mechanism by which tumors obtain vitamin C Journal Article


Authors: Agus, D. B.; Vera, J. C.; Golde, D. W.
Article Title: Stromal cell oxidation: A mechanism by which tumors obtain vitamin C
Abstract: Human tumors may contain high concentrations of ascorbic acid, but little is known about how they acquire the vitamin. Certain specialized cells can transport ascorbic acid directly through a sodium ascorbate cotransporter, but in most cells, vitamin C enters through the facilitative glucose transporters (GLUTs) in the form of dehydroascorbic acid, which is then reduced intracellularly and retained as ascorbic acid. Mice with established hematopoietic and epithelial cell xenografts were studied for the accumulation of injected ascorbic acid and dehydroascorbic acid. Most hematopoietic and epithelial tumor cell lines can only transport vitamin C in the oxidized form (dehydroascorbic acid) in vitro; however, when grown as xenografts in mice, they rapidly accumulated vitamin C after administration of radiolabeled ascorbic acid. The involvement of the GLUTs in vitamin C uptake by the xenografted tumors was demonstrated by competitive inhibition with D-glucose but not L-glucose. Because the malignant cells were not capable of directly transporting ascorbic acid, we reasoned that the ascorbic acid was oxidized to dehydroascorbic acid in the tumor microenvironment. Tumor accumulation of vitamin C in animals injected with ascorbic acid was inhibited by coadministration of superoxide dismutase, implying a role for superoxide anion in the oxidation of ascorbic acid. Whereas the epithelial cancer cell lines could not generate superoxide anion in culture, the minced xenograft tumors did. Our studies show the transport of dehydroascorbic acid by GLUTs is a means by which tumors acquire vitamin C and indicate the oxidation of ascorbic acid by superoxide anion produced by cells in the tumor stroma as a mechanism for generating the transportable form of the vitamin.
Keywords: nonhuman; mouse; animals; mice; models, biological; animal experiment; animal model; breast neoplasms; carcinogenesis; prostatic neoplasms; isotope labeling; xenograft; mice, nude; transplantation, heterologous; glucose; ascorbic acid; stroma cell; superoxide dismutase; stromal cells; oxidation; dehydroascorbic acid; biological transport; glucose transporter type 1; competitive inhibition; glucose transporter; hl-60 cells; leukemia, lymphocytic, acute; monosaccharide transport proteins; vitamin metabolism; humans; male; female; priority journal; article; levo glucose
Journal Title: Cancer Research
Volume: 59
Issue: 18
ISSN: 0008-5472
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research  
Date Published: 1999-09-15
Start Page: 4555
End Page: 4558
Language: English
PUBMED: 10493506
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 16 August 2016 -- Source: Scopus
Citation Impact
MSK Authors
  1. Juan C Vera
    64 Vera
  2. David Golde
    127 Golde
  3. David B Agus
    27 Agus