TY - JOUR
T1 - Mitophagy and Ubiquitination Coordinate Context-Specific Mitochondrial Quality Control and EMT/MET Plasticity to Drive Cancer Cell Invasion
AU - Mao, Bin Hsu
AU - Su, Bo Kai
AU - Wang, Ying Jan
AU - Tu, Ting Yuan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 The Author(s). Advanced Science published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.
PY - 2026/3/18
Y1 - 2026/3/18
N2 - Metastatic invasiveness emerges from coordinated intrinsic programs and microenvironmental cues that converge on mitochondrial quality control (MQC). Here, we use “context” to denote stage- and site-aware constellations of tumor-intrinsic states (e.g., mtROS tone, mtDNA integrity, epigenetic wiring, cellular stiffness, oncogenic mutations) and extrinsic landscapes (oxygen–nutrient availability, ECM mechanics, stromal/inflammatory signals). These axes jointly shape mitochondrial adaptation by tuning bioenergetics, redox balance, metabolic plasticity, fission–fusion dynamics, mechanosensitive hubs, and Ca2+ homeostasis. As pressures intensify, mitochondrial vulnerabilities—such as mtDNA compromise and mtUPR activation—signal the engagement of mitophagy to preserve organelle fitness under stress. Through these coupled changes in mitochondrial performance and stress responses, context governs EMT/MET plasticity and transitions across migratory, invasive, and proliferative states. Mechanistically, ubiquitin conjugation, via E3 ligases and deubiquitinases, serves as an integrating conduit that links mitochondrial remodeling and mitophagy to cytoskeletal reprogramming and invasive behavior. This ubiquitin–mitochondria interface therefore represents a coherent therapeutic entry point; translational strategies including PROTAC-enabled targeting and selective E3/DUB or mitophagy-pathway modulators may rebalance pathological ubiquitin signaling, restore mitochondrial homeostasis, and constrain tumor dissemination.
AB - Metastatic invasiveness emerges from coordinated intrinsic programs and microenvironmental cues that converge on mitochondrial quality control (MQC). Here, we use “context” to denote stage- and site-aware constellations of tumor-intrinsic states (e.g., mtROS tone, mtDNA integrity, epigenetic wiring, cellular stiffness, oncogenic mutations) and extrinsic landscapes (oxygen–nutrient availability, ECM mechanics, stromal/inflammatory signals). These axes jointly shape mitochondrial adaptation by tuning bioenergetics, redox balance, metabolic plasticity, fission–fusion dynamics, mechanosensitive hubs, and Ca2+ homeostasis. As pressures intensify, mitochondrial vulnerabilities—such as mtDNA compromise and mtUPR activation—signal the engagement of mitophagy to preserve organelle fitness under stress. Through these coupled changes in mitochondrial performance and stress responses, context governs EMT/MET plasticity and transitions across migratory, invasive, and proliferative states. Mechanistically, ubiquitin conjugation, via E3 ligases and deubiquitinases, serves as an integrating conduit that links mitochondrial remodeling and mitophagy to cytoskeletal reprogramming and invasive behavior. This ubiquitin–mitochondria interface therefore represents a coherent therapeutic entry point; translational strategies including PROTAC-enabled targeting and selective E3/DUB or mitophagy-pathway modulators may rebalance pathological ubiquitin signaling, restore mitochondrial homeostasis, and constrain tumor dissemination.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105030959417
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105030959417#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1002/advs.202519792
DO - 10.1002/advs.202519792
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:105030959417
SN - 2198-3844
VL - 13
JO - Advanced Science
JF - Advanced Science
IS - 16
M1 - e19792
ER -