OBJECTIVES: In vitro stable isotope glucose tracer studies indicate that undifferentiated cells of the pancreas use glucose primarily through the nonoxidative reactions of the pentose cycle for nucleic acid ribose synthesis, whereas normal or less transformed cells primarily use the oxidative branch of the cycle. METHODS: The pancreatic heads of 4 groups (5/group) of male rats were implanted with time-release pellets designed to deliver placebo or 7,12-dimethylbenzanthracene (DMBA) at 11, 33, or 56 mg/d. Four weeks after pancreatic exposure to DMBA, [1,2-C2]-D-glucose tracer (1 g/kg) was injected intraperitoneally followed by sera collection at 1 and 2 hours and harvest of tumors, adjacent pancreatic tissue, and sera at 3 hours. RESULTS: Tumors (2-9 mm) were found across DMBA groups, with the largest in the high-dose group (> or =5 mm). Selective monitoring by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry of the doubly-labeled [1,2-C2]-D-ribose of RNA, which requires nonoxidative synthesis in the pentose cycle, showed a 2.8-, 2.9-, and 5.7-fold increase in pancreatic tumors. Liver and adjacent pancreas preferentially produced [1-C1]-D-ribose through the oxidative reactions of the cycle. Tumor-bearing animals also cleared and recycled tracer glucose at a faster rate. CONCLUSIONS: Simultaneous selective positional ion monitoring of C-labeled metabolites and their mass isotopomers in tissues and blood opens new avenues for the early detection and response to therapy testing of pancreatic cancer using GC-MS and/or magnetic resonance imaging-based methods. This study emphasizes the benefits of stable isotope-based dynamic metabolic profiling, when applied in vivo, and the several advantages it offers to positron emission tomography.
OBJECTIVES: In vitro stable isotope glucose tracer studies indicate that undifferentiated cells of the pancreas use glucose primarily through the nonoxidative reactions of the pentose cycle for nucleic acid ribose synthesis, whereas normal or less transformed cells primarily use the oxidative branch of the cycle. METHODS: The pancreatic heads of 4 groups (5/group) of male rats were implanted with time-release pellets designed to deliver placebo or 7,12-dimethylbenzanthracene (DMBA) at 11, 33, or 56 mg/d. Four weeks after pancreatic exposure to DMBA, [1,2-C2]-D-glucose tracer (1 g/kg) was injected intraperitoneally followed by sera collection at 1 and 2 hours and harvest of tumors, adjacent pancreatic tissue, and sera at 3 hours. RESULTS:Tumors (2-9 mm) were found across DMBA groups, with the largest in the high-dose group (> or =5 mm). Selective monitoring by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry of the doubly-labeled [1,2-C2]-D-ribose of RNA, which requires nonoxidative synthesis in the pentose cycle, showed a 2.8-, 2.9-, and 5.7-fold increase in pancreatic tumors. Liver and adjacent pancreas preferentially produced [1-C1]-D-ribose through the oxidative reactions of the cycle. Tumor-bearing animals also cleared and recycled tracer glucose at a faster rate. CONCLUSIONS: Simultaneous selective positional ion monitoring of C-labeled metabolites and their mass isotopomers in tissues and blood opens new avenues for the early detection and response to therapy testing of pancreatic cancer using GC-MS and/or magnetic resonance imaging-based methods. This study emphasizes the benefits of stable isotope-based dynamic metabolic profiling, when applied in vivo, and the several advantages it offers to positron emission tomography.
Authors: Karlos X Moreno; Crystal E Harrison; Matthew E Merritt; Zoltan Kovacs; Craig R Malloy; A Dean Sherry Journal: NMR Biomed Date: 2017-03-08 Impact factor: 4.044
Authors: Kavita Bhalla; Bor Jang Hwang; Ruby E Dewi; Lihui Ou; William Twaddel; Hong-Bin Fang; Scott B Vafai; Francesca Vazquez; Pere Puigserver; Laszlo Boros; Geoffrey D Girnun Journal: Cancer Res Date: 2011-09-13 Impact factor: 12.701
Authors: Keith R Laderoute; Joy M Calaoagan; Wan-Ru Chao; Dominc Dinh; Nicholas Denko; Sarah Duellman; Jessica Kalra; Xiaohe Liu; Ioanna Papandreou; Lidia Sambucetti; Laszlo G Boros Journal: J Biol Chem Date: 2014-07-03 Impact factor: 5.157