Literature DB >> 24791164

Luciferase does not Alter Metabolism in Cancer Cells.

Caroline H Johnson1, Timothy S Fisher2, Linh T Hoang1, Brunhilde H Felding3, Gary Siuzdak1, Peter J O'Brien2.   

Abstract

Luciferase transfected cell lines are used extensively for cancer models, revealing valuable biological information about disease mechanisms. However, these genetically encoded reporters, while useful for monitoring tumor response in cancer models, can impact cell metabolism. Indeed firefly luciferase and fatty acyl-CoA synthetases differ by a single amino acid, raising the possibility that luciferase activity might alter metabolism and introduce experimental artifacts. Therefore knowledge of the metabolic response to luciferase transfection is of significant importance, especially given the thousands of research studies using luciferase as an in vivo bioluminescence imaging (BLI) reporter. Untargeted metabolomics experiments were performed to examine three different types of lymphoblastic leukemia cell lines (Ramos, Raji and SUP T1) commonly used in cancer research, each were analyzed with and without vector transduction. The Raji model was also tested under perturbed starvation conditions to examine potential luciferase-mediated stress responses. The results showed that no significant metabolic differences were observed between parental and luciferase transduced cells for each cell line, and that luciferase overexpression does not alter cell metabolism under basal or perturbed conditions.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Luciferase; bioluminescence imaging; metabolomics; reporter gene

Year:  2014        PMID: 24791164      PMCID: PMC4002053          DOI: 10.1007/s11306-014-0622-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Metabolomics        ISSN: 1573-3882            Impact factor:   4.290


  28 in total

Review 1.  Peroxisomal acyl-CoA synthetases.

Authors:  Paul A Watkins; Jessica M Ellis
Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta       Date:  2012-02-17

2.  Firefly luciferase is a bifunctional enzyme: ATP-dependent monooxygenase and a long chain fatty acyl-CoA synthetase.

Authors:  Yuichi Oba; Makoto Ojika; Satoshi Inouye
Journal:  FEBS Lett       Date:  2003-04-10       Impact factor: 4.124

3.  Firefly luciferin-activated rose bengal: in vitro photodynamic therapy by intracellular chemiluminescence in transgenic NIH 3T3 cells.

Authors:  Theodossis Theodossiou; John S Hothersall; Elizabeth A Woods; Klaus Okkenhaug; Jake Jacobson; Alexander J MacRobert
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2003-04-15       Impact factor: 12.701

4.  Firefly luciferase is targeted to peroxisomes in mammalian cells.

Authors:  G A Keller; S Gould; M Deluca; S Subramani
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1987-05       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Functional conversion of fatty acyl-CoA synthetase to firefly luciferase by site-directed mutagenesis: a key substitution responsible for luminescence activity.

Authors:  Yuichi Oba; Koichiro Iida; Satoshi Inouye
Journal:  FEBS Lett       Date:  2009-05-18       Impact factor: 4.124

6.  Firefly luciferase in chemical biology: a compendium of inhibitors, mechanistic evaluation of chemotypes, and suggested use as a reporter.

Authors:  Natasha Thorne; Min Shen; Wendy A Lea; Anton Simeonov; Scott Lovell; Douglas S Auld; James Inglese
Journal:  Chem Biol       Date:  2012-08-24

7.  Liquid chromatography quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry characterization of metabolites guided by the METLIN database.

Authors:  Zheng-Jiang Zhu; Andrew W Schultz; Junhua Wang; Caroline H Johnson; Steven M Yannone; Gary J Patti; Gary Siuzdak
Journal:  Nat Protoc       Date:  2013-02-07       Impact factor: 13.491

8.  Luciferase expression and bioluminescence does not affect tumor cell growth in vitro or in vivo.

Authors:  Jessamy C Tiffen; Charles G Bailey; Cynthia Ng; John E J Rasko; Jeff Holst
Journal:  Mol Cancer       Date:  2010-11-22       Impact factor: 27.401

9.  Inhibition of firefly luciferase by general anesthetics: effect on in vitro and in vivo bioluminescence imaging.

Authors:  Marleen Keyaerts; Isabel Remory; Vicky Caveliers; Karine Breckpot; Tomas J Bos; Jan Poelaert; Axel Bossuyt; Tony Lahoutte
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-01-10       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Differential post-surgical metastasis and survival in SCID, NOD-SCID and NOD-SCID-IL-2Rγ(null) mice with parental and subline variants of human breast cancer: implications for host defense mechanisms regulating metastasis.

Authors:  Chloe C Milsom; Christina R Lee; Christina Hackl; Shan Man; Robert S Kerbel
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-08-14       Impact factor: 3.240

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  1 in total

1.  Interactive XCMS Online: simplifying advanced metabolomic data processing and subsequent statistical analyses.

Authors:  Harsha Gowda; Julijana Ivanisevic; Caroline H Johnson; Michael E Kurczy; H Paul Benton; Duane Rinehart; Thomas Nguyen; Jayashree Ray; Jennifer Kuehl; Bernardo Arevalo; Peter D Westenskow; Junhua Wang; Adam P Arkin; Adam M Deutschbauer; Gary J Patti; Gary Siuzdak
Journal:  Anal Chem       Date:  2014-06-25       Impact factor: 6.986

  1 in total

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