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Beyond aerobic glycolysis : Transformed cells can engage in glutamine metabolism that exceeds the requirement for protein and nucleotide synthesis

TLDR
Transformed cells exhibit a high rate of glutamine consumption that cannot be explained by the nitrogen demand imposed by nucleotide synthesis or maintenance of nonessential amino acid pools, and glutamine metabolism provides a carbon source that facilitates the cell's ability to use glucose-derived carbon and TCA cycle intermediates as biosynthetic precursors.
Abstract
Tumor cell proliferation requires rapid synthesis of macromolecules including lipids, proteins, and nucleotides. Many tumor cells exhibit rapid glucose consumption, with most of the glucose-derived carbon being secreted as lactate despite abundant oxygen availability (the Warburg effect). Here, we used 13C NMR spectroscopy to examine the metabolism of glioblastoma cells exhibiting aerobic glycolysis. In these cells, the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle was active but was characterized by an efflux of substrates for use in biosynthetic pathways, particularly fatty acid synthesis. The success of this synthetic activity depends on activation of pathways to generate reductive power (NADPH) and to restore oxaloacetate for continued TCA cycle function (anaplerosis). Surprisingly, both these needs were met by a high rate of glutamine metabolism. First, conversion of glutamine to lactate (glutaminolysis) was rapid enough to produce sufficient NADPH to support fatty acid synthesis. Second, despite substantial mitochondrial pyruvate metabolism, pyruvate carboxylation was suppressed, and anaplerotic oxaloacetate was derived from glutamine. Glutamine catabolism was accompanied by secretion of alanine and ammonia, such that most of the amino groups from glutamine were lost from the cell rather than incorporated into other molecules. These data demonstrate that transformed cells exhibit a high rate of glutamine consumption that cannot be explained by the nitrogen demand imposed by nucleotide synthesis or maintenance of nonessential amino acid pools. Rather, glutamine metabolism provides a carbon source that facilitates the cell's ability to use glucose-derived carbon and TCA cycle intermediates as biosynthetic precursors.

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Glutamate and asparagine cataplerosis underlie glutamine addiction in melanoma

TL;DR: It is shown that melanoma cells, irrespective of their oncogenic background, depend on glutamine for growth and are less prone to loss of glutamate and TCA cycle metabolites when starved of glutamine.
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Transcriptional and Translational Downregulation of Thioredoxin Interacting Protein Is Required for Metabolic Reprogramming during G1

TL;DR: It is proposed that the coordinated downregulation of MondoA transcriptional activity at theTXNIP promoter and inhibition of TXNIP translation are key components of metabolic reprogramming required for cells to exit quiescence.
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The role of RNA alternative splicing in regulating cancer metabolism

TL;DR: Evidence is presented supporting the idea that AS, in many types of cancer, acts as a molecular switch that alters metabolism to drive tumorigenesis, and it is proposed that the elucidation of misregulated AS and its downstream effects on cancer metabolism emphasizes the need for new therapeutic approaches aiming to modulate the splicing machinery to selectively target cancer cells.
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Molecular Crowding Defines a Common Origin for the Warburg Effect in Proliferating Cells and the Lactate Threshold in Muscle Physiology

TL;DR: In this paper, a model of human central metabolism that incorporates a solvent capacity constraint of metabolic enzymes and mitochondria, accounting for their occupied volume densities, while assuming glucose and/or fatty acid utilization was developed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Isocitrate dehydrogenases in physiology and cancer: biochemical and molecular insight

TL;DR: A model explaining two important features of isocitrate dehydrogenases 1 and 2 mutations, their dominant negative effect and their mutual exclusivity, will be provided and the importance of targeting these mutations and the possibility of augmenting such therapy by targeting other cancer-related pathways will be discussed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

On the origin of cancer cells.

Origin of cancer cells

Otto Warburg
Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence that glutamine, not sugar, is the major energy source for cultured HeLa cells.

TL;DR: Observations suggest that glutamine provides energy by aerobic oxidation from citric acid cycle metabolism, provides more than half of the cell energy when high concentrations of glucose are present, and greater than 98% when fructose or galactose is the carbohydrate.
Journal ArticleDOI

ATP citrate lyase inhibition can suppress tumor cell growth

TL;DR: ACL inhibition by RNAi or the chemical inhibitor SB-204990 limits in vitro proliferation and survival of tumor cells displaying aerobic glycolysis, and these treatments also reduce in vivo tumor growth and induce differentiation.
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