| Literature DB >> 29960885 |
Lukas Bahati Tanner1, Alexander G Goglia2, Monica H Wei3, Talen Sehgal1, Lance R Parsons1, Junyoung O Park4, Eileen White5, Jared E Toettcher2, Joshua D Rabinowitz6.
Abstract
Altered glycolysis is a hallmark of diseases including diabetes and cancer. Despite intensive study of the contributions of individual glycolytic enzymes, systems-level analyses of flux control through glycolysis remain limited. Here, we overexpress in two mammalian cell lines the individual enzymes catalyzing each of the 12 steps linking extracellular glucose to excreted lactate, and find substantial flux control at four steps: glucose import, hexokinase, phosphofructokinase, and lactate export (and not at any steps of lower glycolysis). The four flux-controlling steps are specifically upregulated by the Ras oncogene: optogenetic Ras activation rapidly induces the transcription of isozymes catalyzing these four steps and enhances glycolysis. At least one isozyme catalyzing each of these four steps is consistently elevated in human tumors. Thus, in the studied contexts, flux control in glycolysis is concentrated in four key enzymatic steps. Upregulation of these steps in tumors likely underlies the Warburg effect.Entities:
Keywords: GLUT; MCT1; PFK; PFKFB; flux control; glycolysis; metabolic control analysis; metabolism; metabolomics; optogenetics
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29960885 PMCID: PMC6062487 DOI: 10.1016/j.cels.2018.06.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Syst ISSN: 2405-4712 Impact factor: 10.304