Energy management by enhanced glycolysis in G1-phase in human colon cancer cells in vitro and in vivo

Activation of aerobic glycolysis in cancer cells is well known as the Warburg effect, although its relation to cell- cycle progression remains unknown. In this study, human colon cancer cells were labeled with a cell-cycle phase-dependent fluorescent marker Fucci to distinguish cells in G1-phase and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular cancer research 2013-09, Vol.11 (9), p.973-985
Hauptverfasser: Bao, Yan, Mukai, Kuniaki, Hishiki, Takako, Kubo, Akiko, Ohmura, Mitsuyo, Sugiura, Yuki, Matsuura, Tomomi, Nagahata, Yoshiko, Hayakawa, Noriyo, Yamamoto, Takehiro, Fukuda, Ryo, Saya, Hideyuki, Suematsu, Makoto, Minamishima, Yoji Andrew
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Activation of aerobic glycolysis in cancer cells is well known as the Warburg effect, although its relation to cell- cycle progression remains unknown. In this study, human colon cancer cells were labeled with a cell-cycle phase-dependent fluorescent marker Fucci to distinguish cells in G1-phase and those in S + G2/M phases. Fucci-labeled cells served as splenic xenograft transplants in super-immunodeficient NOG mice and exhibited multiple metastases in the livers, frozen sections of which were analyzed by semiquantitative microscopic imaging mass spectrometry. Results showed that cells in G1-phase exhibited higher concentrations of ATP, NADH, and UDP-N-acetylglucosamine than those in S and G2-M phases, suggesting accelerated glycolysis in G1-phase cells in vivo. Quantitative determination of metabolites in cells synchronized in S, G2-M, and G1 phases suggested that efflux of lactate was elevated significantly in G1-phase. By contrast, ATP production in G2-M was highly dependent on mitochondrial respiration, whereas cells in S-phase mostly exhibited an intermediary energy metabolism between G1 and G2-M phases. Isogenic cells carrying a p53-null mutation appeared more active in glycolysis throughout the cell cycle than wild-type cells. Thus, as the cell cycle progressed from G2-M to G1 phases, the dependency of energy production on glycolysis was increased while the mitochondrial energy production was reciprocally decreased. These results shed light on distinct features of the phase-specific phenotypes of metabolic systems in cancer cells.
ISSN:1541-7786
1557-3125
DOI:10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-12-0669-T