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Home NEWS Science News Cancer

ENTR1 Drives Colon Cancer via Glycolysis

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
June 4, 2025
in Cancer
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ENTR1 affects the progression of colon cancer by regulating energy metabolism under the influence of glycolysis

In a groundbreaking advance in cancer research, scientists have unveiled the pivotal role of ENTR1, an endosome-associated trafficking regulator, in driving the progression of colon cancer through its regulation of energy metabolism, particularly glycolysis. This discovery not only deepens our understanding of tumor biology but also opens promising avenues for targeted therapeutic interventions aimed at crippling cancer’s metabolic lifelines. The study, recently published in BMC Cancer, meticulously elucidates the molecular connection between ENTR1 expression and colon cancer proliferation, placing energy metabolism center stage in the fight against this formidable disease.

Colon cancer remains among the most lethal malignancies worldwide, largely due to its complex pathophysiology and resistance to conventional treatments. The newly identified protein, ENTR1, also recognized as Serologically Defined Colon Cancer Antigen 3 (SDCCAG3), has caught the attention of researchers due to its integral role in protein trafficking within the cell. ENTR1’s function in endosomal transport was known, but its implication in cancer metabolism had not been previously explored with such depth. This study bridges that critical knowledge gap, providing compelling evidence that ENTR1 modulates tumor growth by orchestrating glycolytic pathways.

Energy metabolism reprogramming, especially enhanced glycolysis or the “Warburg effect,” is a hallmark of cancer cells, enabling rapid proliferation even in oxygen-rich environments. The research team embarked on a comprehensive investigation, analyzing ENTR1 expression patterns across normal and tumor tissues using extensive clinical datasets. The data revealed consistent upregulation of ENTR1 in a variety of tumors, including colon cancer, hinting at its possible oncogenic role. By leveraging Mendelian randomization, a sophisticated genetic epidemiology method, they further unraveled a causal relationship implicating ENTR1 as a driver of colon cancer susceptibility.

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Beyond observational data, the study harnessed the power of machine learning algorithms combined with metabolite-based Mendelian randomization to dissect the metabolic consequences of ENTR1 dysregulation. These high-throughput computational techniques illuminated a nexus between heightened ENTR1 activity and augmented glycolytic flux in cancer cells. This metabolic reprogramming fuels the aggressive growth patterns observed in colon tumors, pinpointing ENTR1 as a critical molecular switch that toggles energy pathways in favor of malignancy.

Validating these computational findings, in vitro experiments utilizing the HCT-116 colon cancer cell line demonstrated that knocking out ENTR1 expression markedly diminishes cellular proliferation. This perturbation also led to a significant reduction in the expression of key glycolytic enzymes, underscoring the protein’s direct influence on metabolic machinery. Through this functional validation, the study not only confirms ENTR1’s oncogenic role but also highlights its potential as a strategic target to disrupt cancer metabolism therapeutically.

The research design, marked by an integrative approach spanning clinical data mining, genetic epidemiology, machine learning, and bench experiments, exemplifies the cutting-edge methodology necessary to tackle complex cancer biology questions today. It underscores the utility of Mendelian randomization not only to establish causality but to identify metabolic pathways that could be exploited for intervention. ENTR1’s role as a metabolic regulator therefore represents a paradigm shift in understanding how intracellular trafficking proteins may influence tumor energetics and growth.

Intriguingly, the study’s findings resonate with the growing body of literature linking aberrant intracellular trafficking and endosomal dynamics to cancer progression. ENTR1, situated at this intersection, may coordinate not just metabolic enzyme expression but also the subcellular localization and function of signaling molecules pivotal for tumor survival. Such multifaceted roles emphasize the necessity of exploring ENTR1 within broader cellular contexts, which may unveil additional vulnerabilities in cancer cells.

Translational implications of this discovery are profound. By targeting ENTR1, researchers envision novel therapeutic strategies that could selectively impair cancer cell metabolism without affecting normal cells. Given the heightened glycolytic dependencies of tumors, inhibiting ENTR1 might starve cancer cells of their primary energy source, thereby halting growth and possibly sensitizing tumors to existing treatments. The prospect of targeting a regulator upstream of metabolic enzymes adds a new dimension to cancer metabolic therapies.

Moreover, the study sheds light on the prognostic potential of ENTR1 expression levels. Elevated ENTR1 could serve as a biomarker to identify patients with more aggressive or treatment-resistant colon cancer phenotypes. This would enable clinicians to tailor therapies more effectively and monitor disease progression with greater precision. Integrating ENTR1 assessment into diagnostic workflows could refine patient stratification and therapeutic decision-making.

Despite the exciting revelations, the authors acknowledge the necessity for further research to delineate the exact molecular mechanisms through which ENTR1 controls glycolytic enzyme expression. Investigating its interactions with transcriptional regulators or signaling pathways central to metabolism may provide deeper insights. Animal model studies are also warranted to assess the systemic effects and therapeutic potential of ENTR1 modulation in vivo.

In addition to colon cancer, the upregulation of ENTR1 observed across multiple tumor types hints at a broader oncogenic role. Future expansive studies across diverse cancers could establish whether ENTR1-driven metabolic rewiring is a common thread among malignancies, suggesting wide applicability of ENTR1-targeted treatments. Cross-cancer comparisons might also reveal tumor-type-specific differences in ENTR1 function and regulatory networks.

This research exemplifies the power of integrative, multidisciplinary approaches in unraveling cancer biology’s intricacies. By combining computational genetics, metabolomics, and molecular biology, the team has crafted a compelling narrative of how a trafficking regulator affects the metabolic fate of cancer cells, reinforcing the idea that metabolism and intracellular transport are intertwined drivers of oncogenesis.

As cancer research continues to navigate the complex interplay between genetics, metabolism, and cellular dynamics, proteins like ENTR1 offer promising targets that transcend traditional therapeutic categories. The potential to manipulate energy supply at the molecular transport level could revolutionize treatment paradigms, shifting the focus from symptom management to metabolic disruption.

Importantly, these findings come at a crucial time when the oncology field is intensely exploring metabolism-based therapies. The identification of ENTR1’s role aligns with efforts to find novel vulnerabilities in cancer’s metabolic network, reinforcing the critical importance of studying non-canonical regulators that orchestrate tumor energetics beyond classic metabolic enzymes.

Looking ahead, partnerships between academic researchers, pharmaceutical developers, and clinical practitioners will be essential to translate these findings into effective treatments. Drug development efforts targeting ENTR1 could pave the way for a new class of therapeutics that impair tumor metabolism with high specificity and minimal toxicity.

In summary, this study offers a transformative insight into how ENTR1 promotes colon cancer progression by modulating glycolysis and energy metabolism. By revealing ENTR1 as a crucial metabolic regulator and oncogenic driver, the research paves the way for innovative therapeutic strategies that exploit metabolic dependencies in cancer. It highlights the untapped potential of intracellular trafficking proteins as key players in cancer biology and treatment, marking a significant milestone in the ongoing battle against colon cancer.

Subject of Research: The role of ENTR1 in colon cancer progression through regulation of energy metabolism and glycolysis.

Article Title: ENTR1 affects the progression of colon cancer by regulating energy metabolism under the influence of glycolysis.

Article References:
Ma, A., Zhai, C., He, Q. et al. ENTR1 affects the progression of colon cancer by regulating energy metabolism under the influence of glycolysis. BMC Cancer 25, 992 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-025-14412-5

Image Credits: Scienmag.com

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-025-14412-5

Tags: cancer research breakthroughscolon cancer pathophysiologyendosomal trafficking and cancerenergy metabolism reprogrammingENTR1 and colon cancerglycolysis in cancer metabolismmetabolic pathways in colon cancerresistance to cancer treatmentsSDCCAG3 protein functionstargeted therapies for colon cancertumor biology and ENTR1Warburg effect in tumors

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