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Inhibition of glucose turnover by 3-bromopyruvate counteracts pancreatic cancer stem cell features and sensitizes cells to gemcitabine

According to the cancer stem cell (CSC) hypothesis, the aggressive growth and early metastasis of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) is due to the activity of CSCs, which are not targeted by current therapies. Otto Warburg suggested that the growth of cancer cells is driven by a high glucose met...

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Autores principales: Isayev, Orkhan, Rausch, Vanessa, Bauer, Nathalie, Liu, Li, Fan, Pei, Zhang, Yiyao, Gladkich, Jury, Nwaeburu, Clifford C., Mattern, Jürgen, Mollenhauer, Martin, Rückert, Felix, Zach, Sebastian, Haberkorn, Uwe, Gross, Wolfgang, Schönsiegel, Frank, Bazhin, Alexandr V., Herr, Ingrid
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4148131/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25015789
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author Isayev, Orkhan
Rausch, Vanessa
Bauer, Nathalie
Liu, Li
Fan, Pei
Zhang, Yiyao
Gladkich, Jury
Nwaeburu, Clifford C.
Mattern, Jürgen
Mollenhauer, Martin
Rückert, Felix
Zach, Sebastian
Haberkorn, Uwe
Gross, Wolfgang
Schönsiegel, Frank
Bazhin, Alexandr V.
Herr, Ingrid
author_facet Isayev, Orkhan
Rausch, Vanessa
Bauer, Nathalie
Liu, Li
Fan, Pei
Zhang, Yiyao
Gladkich, Jury
Nwaeburu, Clifford C.
Mattern, Jürgen
Mollenhauer, Martin
Rückert, Felix
Zach, Sebastian
Haberkorn, Uwe
Gross, Wolfgang
Schönsiegel, Frank
Bazhin, Alexandr V.
Herr, Ingrid
author_sort Isayev, Orkhan
collection PubMed
description According to the cancer stem cell (CSC) hypothesis, the aggressive growth and early metastasis of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) is due to the activity of CSCs, which are not targeted by current therapies. Otto Warburg suggested that the growth of cancer cells is driven by a high glucose metabolism. Here, we investigated whether glycolysis inhibition targets CSCs and thus may enhance therapeutic efficacy. Four established and 3 primary PDA cell lines, non-malignant cells, and 3 patient-tumor-derived CSC-enriched spheroidal cultures were analyzed by glucose turnover measurements, MTT and ATP assays, flow cytometry of ALDH1 activity and annexin positivity, colony and spheroid formation, western blotting, electrophoretic mobility shift assay, xenotransplantation, and immunohistochemistry. The effect of siRNA-mediated inhibition of LDH-A and LDH-B was also investigated. The PDA cells exhibited a high glucose metabolism, and glucose withdrawal or LDH inhibition by siRNA prevented growth and colony formation. Treatment with the anti-glycolytic agent 3-bromopyruvate almost completely blocked cell viability, self-renewal potential, NF-κB binding activity, and stem cell-related signaling and reverted gemcitabine resistance. 3-bromopyruvate was less effective in weakly malignant PDA cells and did not affect non-malignant cells, predicting minimal side effects. 3-bromopyruvate inhibited in vivo tumor engraftment and growth on chicken eggs and mice and enhanced the efficacy of gemcitabine by influencing the expression of markers of proliferation, apoptosis, self-renewal, and metastasis. Most importantly, primary CSC-enriched spheroidal cultures were eliminated by 3-bromopyruvate. These findings propose that CSCs may be specifically dependent on a high glucose turnover and suggest 3-bromopyruvate for therapeutic intervention.
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spelling pubmed-41481312014-08-29 Inhibition of glucose turnover by 3-bromopyruvate counteracts pancreatic cancer stem cell features and sensitizes cells to gemcitabine Isayev, Orkhan Rausch, Vanessa Bauer, Nathalie Liu, Li Fan, Pei Zhang, Yiyao Gladkich, Jury Nwaeburu, Clifford C. Mattern, Jürgen Mollenhauer, Martin Rückert, Felix Zach, Sebastian Haberkorn, Uwe Gross, Wolfgang Schönsiegel, Frank Bazhin, Alexandr V. Herr, Ingrid Oncotarget Research Paper According to the cancer stem cell (CSC) hypothesis, the aggressive growth and early metastasis of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) is due to the activity of CSCs, which are not targeted by current therapies. Otto Warburg suggested that the growth of cancer cells is driven by a high glucose metabolism. Here, we investigated whether glycolysis inhibition targets CSCs and thus may enhance therapeutic efficacy. Four established and 3 primary PDA cell lines, non-malignant cells, and 3 patient-tumor-derived CSC-enriched spheroidal cultures were analyzed by glucose turnover measurements, MTT and ATP assays, flow cytometry of ALDH1 activity and annexin positivity, colony and spheroid formation, western blotting, electrophoretic mobility shift assay, xenotransplantation, and immunohistochemistry. The effect of siRNA-mediated inhibition of LDH-A and LDH-B was also investigated. The PDA cells exhibited a high glucose metabolism, and glucose withdrawal or LDH inhibition by siRNA prevented growth and colony formation. Treatment with the anti-glycolytic agent 3-bromopyruvate almost completely blocked cell viability, self-renewal potential, NF-κB binding activity, and stem cell-related signaling and reverted gemcitabine resistance. 3-bromopyruvate was less effective in weakly malignant PDA cells and did not affect non-malignant cells, predicting minimal side effects. 3-bromopyruvate inhibited in vivo tumor engraftment and growth on chicken eggs and mice and enhanced the efficacy of gemcitabine by influencing the expression of markers of proliferation, apoptosis, self-renewal, and metastasis. Most importantly, primary CSC-enriched spheroidal cultures were eliminated by 3-bromopyruvate. These findings propose that CSCs may be specifically dependent on a high glucose turnover and suggest 3-bromopyruvate for therapeutic intervention. Impact Journals LLC 2014-06-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4148131/ /pubmed/25015789 Text en Copyright: © 2014 Isayev et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Isayev, Orkhan
Rausch, Vanessa
Bauer, Nathalie
Liu, Li
Fan, Pei
Zhang, Yiyao
Gladkich, Jury
Nwaeburu, Clifford C.
Mattern, Jürgen
Mollenhauer, Martin
Rückert, Felix
Zach, Sebastian
Haberkorn, Uwe
Gross, Wolfgang
Schönsiegel, Frank
Bazhin, Alexandr V.
Herr, Ingrid
Inhibition of glucose turnover by 3-bromopyruvate counteracts pancreatic cancer stem cell features and sensitizes cells to gemcitabine
title Inhibition of glucose turnover by 3-bromopyruvate counteracts pancreatic cancer stem cell features and sensitizes cells to gemcitabine
title_full Inhibition of glucose turnover by 3-bromopyruvate counteracts pancreatic cancer stem cell features and sensitizes cells to gemcitabine
title_fullStr Inhibition of glucose turnover by 3-bromopyruvate counteracts pancreatic cancer stem cell features and sensitizes cells to gemcitabine
title_full_unstemmed Inhibition of glucose turnover by 3-bromopyruvate counteracts pancreatic cancer stem cell features and sensitizes cells to gemcitabine
title_short Inhibition of glucose turnover by 3-bromopyruvate counteracts pancreatic cancer stem cell features and sensitizes cells to gemcitabine
title_sort inhibition of glucose turnover by 3-bromopyruvate counteracts pancreatic cancer stem cell features and sensitizes cells to gemcitabine
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4148131/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25015789
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