| Literature DB >> 26322680 |
Elena Doménech1, Carolina Maestre1, Lorena Esteban-Martínez2, David Partida1, Rosa Pascual3, Gonzalo Fernández-Miranda3, Esther Seco2, Ramón Campos-Olivas4, Manuel Pérez5, Diego Megias5, Katherine Allen6, Miguel López7,8, Asish K Saha6, Guillermo Velasco9, Eduardo Rial10, Raúl Méndez3, Patricia Boya2, María Salazar-Roa1, Marcos Malumbres1.
Abstract
Blocking mitotic progression has been proposed as an attractive therapeutic strategy to impair proliferation of tumour cells. However, how cells survive during prolonged mitotic arrest is not well understood. We show here that survival during mitotic arrest is affected by the special energetic requirements of mitotic cells. Prolonged mitotic arrest results in mitophagy-dependent loss of mitochondria, accompanied by reduced ATP levels and the activation of AMPK. Oxidative respiration is replaced by glycolysis owing to AMPK-dependent phosphorylation of PFKFB3 and increased production of this protein as a consequence of mitotic-specific translational activation of its mRNA. Induction of autophagy or inhibition of AMPK or PFKFB3 results in enhanced cell death in mitosis and improves the anti-tumoral efficiency of microtubule poisons in breast cancer cells. Thus, survival of mitotic-arrested cells is limited by their metabolic requirements, a feature with potential implications in cancer therapies aimed to impair mitosis or metabolism in tumour cells.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26322680 DOI: 10.1038/ncb3231
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Cell Biol ISSN: 1465-7392 Impact factor: 28.824