-
Something wrong with this record ?
Aglycemia keeps mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation under hypoxic conditions in HepG2 cells
L. Plecitá-Hlavatá, J. Ježek, P. Ježek,
Language English Country United States
Document type Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
NLK
ProQuest Central
from 1997-02-01 to 1 year ago
Medline Complete (EBSCOhost)
from 2011-02-01 to 1 year ago
Health & Medicine (ProQuest)
from 1997-02-01 to 1 year ago
- MeSH
- Cell Culture Techniques MeSH
- Hep G2 Cells MeSH
- Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1, alpha Subunit metabolism MeSH
- Cell Hypoxia MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Mitochondria metabolism MeSH
- Oxidative Phosphorylation MeSH
- Check Tag
- Humans MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't MeSH
Cancer cell bioenergetics, maintaining mixed aerobic glycolysis (Warburg phenotype) and oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS), is not fully elucidated. Hypoxia-dependent OXPHOS suppression determines aerobic glycolysis. To elucidate further details, we studied hypoxic adaptation (up to 72 h at 5 % oxygen) of hepatocellular carcinoma HepG2 cells. The key regulatory component, hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1α (HIF-1α) was stabilized at 5 h in 5 % oxygen for all three studied regimens, i.e. in glycolytic cells at 5 mM or 25 mM glucose, or in aglycemic (OXPHOS) cells when glucose was replaced by galactose. However, the conventional HIF-mediated suppression of respiration was prevented at aglycemia, which correlated with a high proportion of unphosphorylated pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) at 5 % oxygen. Such a modified HIF response in OXPHOS cells, termed as a non-canonical one, contrasted to conventional respiration suppression down to 45 % or 43 %, observed in hypoxia-adapted glycolytic cells at 5 mM or 25 mM glucose, respectively. These hypoxic glycolytic cells had normally highly phosphorylated PDH and most likely utilized pyruvate by aminotransferase reaction of glutaminolysis to feed at least suppressed respiration. Also, glycolytic cells were rather resistant towards the staurosporine-induced apoptosis, whereas aglycemic (OXPHOS) HepG2 cells exhibited much higher susceptibility. We conclude that aglycemia modulates the hypoxic HIF signaling toward a non-canonical response that is unable to carry out complete PDH phosphorylation, allowing a high pyruvate input for OXPHOS from the elevated glycolysis, which together with ongoing glutaminolysis maintain a virtually unchanged respiration. Similar OXPHOS revival may explain distinct tumor sensitivity to chemotherapy and other pharmacological interventions.
References provided by Crossref.org
- 000
- 00000naa a2200000 a 4500
- 001
- bmc16028122
- 003
- CZ-PrNML
- 005
- 20161025093759.0
- 007
- ta
- 008
- 161005s2015 xxu f 000 0|eng||
- 009
- AR
- 024 7_
- $a 10.1007/s10863-015-9628-6 $2 doi
- 024 7_
- $a 10.1007/s10863-015-9628-6 $2 doi
- 035 __
- $a (PubMed)26449597
- 040 __
- $a ABA008 $b cze $d ABA008 $e AACR2
- 041 0_
- $a eng
- 044 __
- $a xxu
- 100 1_
- $a Plecitá-Hlavatá, Lydie $u Department of Membrane Transport Biophysics, No. 75, Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Vídeňská 1083, 14220, Prague 4, Czech Republic.
- 245 10
- $a Aglycemia keeps mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation under hypoxic conditions in HepG2 cells / $c L. Plecitá-Hlavatá, J. Ježek, P. Ježek,
- 520 9_
- $a Cancer cell bioenergetics, maintaining mixed aerobic glycolysis (Warburg phenotype) and oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS), is not fully elucidated. Hypoxia-dependent OXPHOS suppression determines aerobic glycolysis. To elucidate further details, we studied hypoxic adaptation (up to 72 h at 5 % oxygen) of hepatocellular carcinoma HepG2 cells. The key regulatory component, hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1α (HIF-1α) was stabilized at 5 h in 5 % oxygen for all three studied regimens, i.e. in glycolytic cells at 5 mM or 25 mM glucose, or in aglycemic (OXPHOS) cells when glucose was replaced by galactose. However, the conventional HIF-mediated suppression of respiration was prevented at aglycemia, which correlated with a high proportion of unphosphorylated pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) at 5 % oxygen. Such a modified HIF response in OXPHOS cells, termed as a non-canonical one, contrasted to conventional respiration suppression down to 45 % or 43 %, observed in hypoxia-adapted glycolytic cells at 5 mM or 25 mM glucose, respectively. These hypoxic glycolytic cells had normally highly phosphorylated PDH and most likely utilized pyruvate by aminotransferase reaction of glutaminolysis to feed at least suppressed respiration. Also, glycolytic cells were rather resistant towards the staurosporine-induced apoptosis, whereas aglycemic (OXPHOS) HepG2 cells exhibited much higher susceptibility. We conclude that aglycemia modulates the hypoxic HIF signaling toward a non-canonical response that is unable to carry out complete PDH phosphorylation, allowing a high pyruvate input for OXPHOS from the elevated glycolysis, which together with ongoing glutaminolysis maintain a virtually unchanged respiration. Similar OXPHOS revival may explain distinct tumor sensitivity to chemotherapy and other pharmacological interventions.
- 650 _2
- $a buněčné kultury $7 D018929
- 650 _2
- $a hypoxie buňky $7 D015687
- 650 _2
- $a buňky Hep G2 $7 D056945
- 650 _2
- $a lidé $7 D006801
- 650 _2
- $a faktor 1 indukovatelný hypoxií - podjednotka alfa $x metabolismus $7 D051795
- 650 _2
- $a mitochondrie $x metabolismus $7 D008928
- 650 _2
- $a oxidativní fosforylace $7 D010085
- 655 _2
- $a časopisecké články $7 D016428
- 655 _2
- $a práce podpořená grantem $7 D013485
- 700 1_
- $a Ježek, Jan $u Department of Membrane Transport Biophysics, No. 75, Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Vídeňská 1083, 14220, Prague 4, Czech Republic.
- 700 1_
- $a Ježek, Petr $u Department of Membrane Transport Biophysics, No. 75, Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Vídeňská 1083, 14220, Prague 4, Czech Republic. jezek@biomed.cas.cz.
- 773 0_
- $w MED00002541 $t Journal of bioenergetics and biomembranes $x 1573-6881 $g Roč. 47, č. 6 (2015), s. 467-76
- 856 41
- $u https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26449597 $y Pubmed
- 910 __
- $a ABA008 $b sig $c sign $y a $z 0
- 990 __
- $a 20161005 $b ABA008
- 991 __
- $a 20161025094212 $b ABA008
- 999 __
- $a ok $b bmc $g 1166436 $s 952752
- BAS __
- $a 3
- BAS __
- $a PreBMC
- BMC __
- $a 2015 $b 47 $c 6 $d 467-76 $e 20151008 $i 1573-6881 $m Journal of bioenergetics and biomembranes $n J Bioenerg Biomembr $x MED00002541
- LZP __
- $a Pubmed-20161005