| Literature DB >> 25574168 |
Abstract
Exemplified by cancer cells' preference for glycolysis, for example, the Warburg effect, altered metabolism in tumorigenesis has emerged as an important aspect of cancer in the past 10-20 years. Whether due to changes in regulatory tumor suppressors/oncogenes or by acting as metabolic oncogenes themselves, enzymes involved in the complex network of metabolic pathways are being studied to understand their role and assess their utility as therapeutic targets. Conversion of glycolytic intermediate 3-phosphoglycerate into phosphohydroxypyruvate by the enzyme phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PHGDH)-a rate-limiting step in the conversion of 3-phosphoglycerate to serine-represents one such mechanism. Forgotten since classic animal studies in the 1980s, the role of PHGDH as a potential therapeutic target and putative metabolic oncogene has recently reemerged following publication of two prominent papers near-simultaneously in 2011. Since that time, numerous studies and a host of metabolic explanations have been put forward in an attempt to understand the results observed. In this paper, I review the historic progression of our understanding of the role of PHGDH in cancer from the early work by Snell through its reemergence and rise to prominence, culminating in an assessment of subsequent work and what it means for the future of PHGDH.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25574168 PMCID: PMC4276281 DOI: 10.1155/2014/524101
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Oncol ISSN: 1687-8450 Impact factor: 4.375
Figure 1Schematic of glycolysis in a mammalian cell showing a branch point wherein glycolytic intermediate 3-phosphoglycerate can be channeled into a serine biosynthetic pathway via the activity of putative metabolic oncogene phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (red), adapted from Hamanaka and Chandel [15].
Figure 2Schematic of the major pathways of serine metabolism in a mammalian liver. Shown in red, phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase, the first enzyme branching from glycolysis in a three-step serine biosynthetic pathway uses NAD+ as a cofactor to oxidize 3-phosphoglycerate into phosphohydroxypyruvate. The product is then subsequently converted into phosphoserine via transamination by phosphoserine aminotransferase and, ultimately, to serine via phosphate ester hydrolysis and the enzyme phosphoserine phosphatase. Classic work by Snell [16] suggests preferential upregulation of the serine hydroxymethyltransferase branch, leading to nucleic acid synthesis coupled with downregulation of the serine dehydratase and serine aminotransferase branches in some subsets of cancer cells, adapted from Snell [16].
Summary of major contributions to the understanding of phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PHGDH) in cancer.
| Study | Year | Type of cancer | Contribution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Snell et al. [ | 1984–1988 | Hepatoma (rat) | (i) Elevation of PHGDH |
| (ii) Did not respond to changes in dietary protein level | |||
| (iii) Correlated with increased rate of serine biosynthesis | |||
| (iv) Correlated with tumorigenic rate of growth | |||
| (v) Associated with neoplastic transformation and progression | |||
| (vi) Corresponding increases in serine hydroxymethyltransferase activity, absence of serine dehydratase and serine aminotransferase ( | |||
| Sarcoma (rat) | (i) Consistent effects | ||
| Colon carcinoma (human) | (i) Consistent effects | ||
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Cho et al. [ | 2000 | Leukemia (human) | (i) Detectable 2.1 kb and 710 bp mRNA PHGDH transcripts |
| T-cell lymphoblastic lymphoma (human) | (i) Detectable 2.1 kb and 710 bp mRNA PHGDH transcripts | ||
| Colon adenocarcinoma (human) | (i) Detectable 2.1 kb and 710 bp mRNA PHGDH transcripts | ||
| Epithelioid carcinoma (human) | (i) Detectable 2.1 kb and 710 bp mRNA PHGDH transcripts | ||
| Lymphoma (murine) | (i) Detectable 2.1 kb and 710 bp mRNA PHGDH transcripts | ||
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Pollari et al. [ | 2011 | Bone metastatic breast cancer | (i) Enhanced serine production |
| (ii) Stimulation of osteoclastogenesis | |||
| (iii) Genetic upregulation of PHGDH, PSAT1, and PSPH ( | |||
| (iv) Association with shorter time to relapse, reduced survival time, and several “clinically relevant features” | |||
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Possemato et al. [ | 2011 | Breast cancer | (i) |
| (ii) Elevated protein expression in estrogen receptor-negative breast cancer, relative to estrogen receptor-positive tumors approx. 68% mRNA and 70% protein elevations | |||
| (iii) Protein levels were elevated in estrogen receptor-negative cells lacking genetic copy number gains | |||
| (iv) Drives glucose-originating flux through the biosynthetic serine pathway | |||
| (v) Serine production is not the only important role for PHGDH in cancer cells → parallel increase in PSAT1 expression and conversion of glutamate to aKG | |||
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Locasale et al. [ | 2011 | Melanoma | (i) “Substantial fraction” of glycolytic flux diverted to serine production |
| (ii) | |||
| (iii) Found localized amplification of | |||
| (iv) Elevated protein expression in human melanoma cells | |||
| Breast cancer | (i) High protein expression associated with triple-negative and basal subtypes but did not associate with metastasis or tumor size (contrary to previous results) | ||
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Liu et al. [ | 2013 | Astrocytoma/glioma | (i) Elevation in brain tissue not normally expressing PHGDH |
| (ii) Correlated with progressively advanced tumor grade | |||
| (iii) Stabilizing binding interaction with oncogenic transcription factor FOXM1, induction of a series of known oncogenes | |||
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Jing et al. [ | 2013 | Cervical cancer | (i) Elevated protein expression in squamous cell carcinoma |
| (ii) Associated with tumor progression, stage, and size | |||
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Noh et al. [ | 2014 | Triple-negative breast cancer | (i) Basal marker-positive patients exhibited increased protein expression relative to basal marker-negative patients |
| (ii) Protein expression was high in patients with mixed basal-like subtypes; 89.3% of mixed subtypes showed partial expression of basal markers | |||