Literature DB >> 7614462

High Km glucose-phosphorylating (glucokinase) activities in a range of tumor cell lines and inhibition of rates of tumor growth by the specific enzyme inhibitor mannoheptulose.

M Board1, A Colquhoun, E A Newsholme.   

Abstract

Differences in modes of control of glycolysis in tumor cells, compared with normal cells, have suggested that phosphofructokinase may not catalyse the rate-controlling step. Instead, hexokinase activity may assume a more important regulatory role. Hexokinase activities are consistently lower than those of phosphofructokinase in tumor cells, and the former enzyme may be saturated with its substrate (M. Board et al., Biochem. J. 265: 503-509, 1990). The present work has focused on the glucose-phosphorylation step in tumor cell glycolysis. A range of eight human tumor cell-lines, one human tumor tissue, and four rat tumor cell lines were found to have an additional glucose-phosphorylating activity, with properties similar to hepatic glucokinase. Maximal activities range from 1.1-20 nmol/min/mg cell protein, and the activity is consistently absent from any untransformed cell line or tissue tested, except rat liver tissue (18 nmol/min/mg cell protein). Tumor cell glucokinase activity has been characterized by its high Km for glucose (8-11.8 mM); inhibition by the specific glucokinase inhibitor, mannoheptulose (I50, 12.5 mM); and lack of inhibition by 10 mM glucose-6-phosphate. Mannoheptulose also causes inhibition of glucose uptake by tumor cells (25-75% at 30 mM mannoheptulose) and inhibition of rates of growth of cultured tumor cell lines (I50, 21.4 mM). Rates of growth of human tumors in experimental animals are dramatically reduced (by 65-79%) by a dose of 1.7 mg/g mannoheptulose daily for 5 days. The potential of the naturally occurring sugar, mannoheptulose (which is purified from avocados and is assumed to be of low toxicity), as a cancer treatment is discussed.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7614462

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Res        ISSN: 0008-5472            Impact factor:   12.701


  8 in total

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Review 2.  Mitochondrial metabolism inhibitors for cancer therapy.

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Review 3.  The role of phosphometabolites in cell proliferation, energy metabolism, and tumor therapy.

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4.  Dual Fluorescence Isogenic Synthetic Lethal Kinase Screen and High-Content Secondary Screening for MUC16/CA125-Selective Agents.

Authors:  Thapi D Rao; Mengyao Xu; Stephanie Eng; Guangli Yang; Robin Manson; Nestor Rosales; Raj Kumar; Irva E Veillard; Qin Zhou; Alexia Iasonos; Ouathek Ouerfelli; Hakim Djaballah; David R Spriggs; Oladapo O Yeku
Journal:  Mol Cancer Ther       Date:  2022-05-04       Impact factor: 6.009

5.  Hexokinase inhibition using D-Mannoheptulose enhances oncolytic newcastle disease virus-mediated killing of breast cancer cells.

Authors:  Ahmed Ghdhban Al-Ziaydi; Ahmed Majeed Al-Shammari; Mohammed I Hamzah; Haider Sabah Kadhim; Majid Sakhi Jabir
Journal:  Cancer Cell Int       Date:  2020-08-28       Impact factor: 5.722

6.  Retinoblastoma treatment: impact of the glycolytic inhibitor 2-deoxy-d-glucose on molecular genomics expression in LH(BETA)T(AG) retinal tumors.

Authors:  Yolanda Piña; Samuel K Houston; Timothy G Murray; Tulay Koru-Sengul; Christina Decatur; William K Scott; Lubov Nathanson; Jennifer Clarke; Theodore J Lampidis
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7.  Synthesis of D-manno-heptulose via a cascade aldol/hemiketalization reaction.

Authors:  Yan Chen; Xiaoman Wang; Junchang Wang; You Yang
Journal:  Beilstein J Org Chem       Date:  2017-04-28       Impact factor: 2.883

8.  An Avocado Extract Enriched in Mannoheptulose Prevents the Negative Effects of a High-Fat Diet in Mice.

Authors:  Paul J Pistell; Tadanobu Utsuki; Joseph Francis; Philip J Ebenezer; Jennifer Terrebonne; George S Roth; Donald K Ingram
Journal:  Nutrients       Date:  2021-12-29       Impact factor: 5.717

  8 in total

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