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Rhabdomyosarcoma cells show an energy producing anabolic metabolic phenotype compared with primary myocytes

BACKGROUND: The functional status of a cell is expressed in its metabolic activity. We have applied stable isotope tracing methods to determine the differences in metabolic pathways in proliferating Rhabdomysarcoma cells (Rh30) and human primary myocytes in culture. Uniformly (13)C-labeled glucose w...

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Autores principales: Fan, Teresa WM, Kucia, Magda, Jankowski, Kacper, Higashi, Richard M, Ratajczak, Janina, Ratajczak, Marius Z, Lane, Andrew N
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2577687/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18939998
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-4598-7-79
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author Fan, Teresa WM
Kucia, Magda
Jankowski, Kacper
Higashi, Richard M
Ratajczak, Janina
Ratajczak, Marius Z
Lane, Andrew N
author_facet Fan, Teresa WM
Kucia, Magda
Jankowski, Kacper
Higashi, Richard M
Ratajczak, Janina
Ratajczak, Marius Z
Lane, Andrew N
author_sort Fan, Teresa WM
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The functional status of a cell is expressed in its metabolic activity. We have applied stable isotope tracing methods to determine the differences in metabolic pathways in proliferating Rhabdomysarcoma cells (Rh30) and human primary myocytes in culture. Uniformly (13)C-labeled glucose was used as a source molecule to follow the incorporation of (13)C into more than 40 marker metabolites using NMR and GC-MS. These include metabolites that report on the activity of glycolysis, Krebs' cycle, pentose phosphate pathway and pyrimidine biosynthesis. RESULTS: The Rh30 cells proliferated faster than the myocytes. Major differences in flux through glycolysis were evident from incorporation of label into secreted lactate, which accounts for a substantial fraction of the glucose carbon utilized by the cells. Krebs' cycle activity as determined by (13)C isotopomer distributions in glutamate, aspartate, malate and pyrimidine rings was considerably higher in the cancer cells than in the primary myocytes. Large differences were also evident in de novo biosynthesis of riboses in the free nucleotide pools, as well as entry of glucose carbon into the pyrimidine rings in the free nucleotide pool. Specific labeling patterns in these metabolites show the increased importance of anaplerotic reactions in the cancer cells to maintain the high demand for anabolic and energy metabolism compared with the slower growing primary myocytes. Serum-stimulated Rh30 cells showed higher degrees of labeling than serum starved cells, but they retained their characteristic anabolic metabolism profile. The myocytes showed evidence of de novo synthesis of glycogen, which was absent in the Rh30 cells. CONCLUSION: The specific (13)C isotopomer patterns showed that the major difference between the transformed and the primary cells is the shift from energy and maintenance metabolism in the myocytes toward increased energy and anabolic metabolism for proliferation in the Rh30 cells. The data further show that the mitochondria remain functional in Krebs' cycle activity and respiratory electron transfer that enables continued accelerated glycolysis. This may be a common adaptive strategy in cancer cells.
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spelling pubmed-25776872008-11-04 Rhabdomyosarcoma cells show an energy producing anabolic metabolic phenotype compared with primary myocytes Fan, Teresa WM Kucia, Magda Jankowski, Kacper Higashi, Richard M Ratajczak, Janina Ratajczak, Marius Z Lane, Andrew N Mol Cancer Research BACKGROUND: The functional status of a cell is expressed in its metabolic activity. We have applied stable isotope tracing methods to determine the differences in metabolic pathways in proliferating Rhabdomysarcoma cells (Rh30) and human primary myocytes in culture. Uniformly (13)C-labeled glucose was used as a source molecule to follow the incorporation of (13)C into more than 40 marker metabolites using NMR and GC-MS. These include metabolites that report on the activity of glycolysis, Krebs' cycle, pentose phosphate pathway and pyrimidine biosynthesis. RESULTS: The Rh30 cells proliferated faster than the myocytes. Major differences in flux through glycolysis were evident from incorporation of label into secreted lactate, which accounts for a substantial fraction of the glucose carbon utilized by the cells. Krebs' cycle activity as determined by (13)C isotopomer distributions in glutamate, aspartate, malate and pyrimidine rings was considerably higher in the cancer cells than in the primary myocytes. Large differences were also evident in de novo biosynthesis of riboses in the free nucleotide pools, as well as entry of glucose carbon into the pyrimidine rings in the free nucleotide pool. Specific labeling patterns in these metabolites show the increased importance of anaplerotic reactions in the cancer cells to maintain the high demand for anabolic and energy metabolism compared with the slower growing primary myocytes. Serum-stimulated Rh30 cells showed higher degrees of labeling than serum starved cells, but they retained their characteristic anabolic metabolism profile. The myocytes showed evidence of de novo synthesis of glycogen, which was absent in the Rh30 cells. CONCLUSION: The specific (13)C isotopomer patterns showed that the major difference between the transformed and the primary cells is the shift from energy and maintenance metabolism in the myocytes toward increased energy and anabolic metabolism for proliferation in the Rh30 cells. The data further show that the mitochondria remain functional in Krebs' cycle activity and respiratory electron transfer that enables continued accelerated glycolysis. This may be a common adaptive strategy in cancer cells. BioMed Central 2008-10-21 /pmc/articles/PMC2577687/ /pubmed/18939998 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-4598-7-79 Text en Copyright © 2008 Fan et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Fan, Teresa WM
Kucia, Magda
Jankowski, Kacper
Higashi, Richard M
Ratajczak, Janina
Ratajczak, Marius Z
Lane, Andrew N
Rhabdomyosarcoma cells show an energy producing anabolic metabolic phenotype compared with primary myocytes
title Rhabdomyosarcoma cells show an energy producing anabolic metabolic phenotype compared with primary myocytes
title_full Rhabdomyosarcoma cells show an energy producing anabolic metabolic phenotype compared with primary myocytes
title_fullStr Rhabdomyosarcoma cells show an energy producing anabolic metabolic phenotype compared with primary myocytes
title_full_unstemmed Rhabdomyosarcoma cells show an energy producing anabolic metabolic phenotype compared with primary myocytes
title_short Rhabdomyosarcoma cells show an energy producing anabolic metabolic phenotype compared with primary myocytes
title_sort rhabdomyosarcoma cells show an energy producing anabolic metabolic phenotype compared with primary myocytes
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2577687/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18939998
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-4598-7-79
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