4.3 Article

PTEN regulates plasma membrane expression of glucose transporter 1 and glucose uptake in thyroid cancer cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 53, Issue 2, Pages 247-258

Publisher

BIOSCIENTIFICA LTD
DOI: 10.1530/JME-14-0118

Keywords

PTEN; glucose; Warburg effect; FDG-PET imaging, cancer; GLUT

Funding

  1. Associazione Franca Capurro per Novara - Onlus
  2. PhD fellowship in Biotechnology for Human Health
  3. 'Associazione per la Ricerca Medica Ippocrate-Rhazi' (Novara, Italy)
  4. 'Progetto Lagrange' PhD student fellowship (Cassa di Risparmio di Torino, Italy)
  5. Comoli, Ferrari & SpA (Novara, Italy)
  6. 'Liberato Di Lauro' post-doc fellowship

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Glucose represents an important source of energy for the cells. Proliferating cancer cells consume elevated quantity of glucose, which is converted into lactate regardless of the presence of oxygen. This phenomenon, known as the Warburg effect, has been proven to be useful for imaging metabolically active tumours in cancer patients by 18 F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET). Glucose is internalised in the cells by glucose transporters (GLUTs) belonging to the GLUT family. GLUT1 (SLC2A1) is the most prevalent isoform in more aggressive and less differentiated thyroid cancer histotypes. In a previous work, we found that loss of expression of PTEN was associated with increased expression of GLUT1 on the plasma membrane (PM) and probability of detecting thyroid incidentalomas by FDG-PET. Herein, we investigated the molecular pathways that govern the expression of GLUT1 on the PM and the glucose uptake in WRO (expressing WT PTEN) and FTC133 (PTEN null) follicular thyroid cancer cells cultured under glucose-depleted conditions. The membrane expression of GLUT1 was enhanced in glucose-deprived cells. Through genetic manipulations of PTEN expression, we could demonstrate that the lack of this oncosuppressor has a dominant effect on the membrane expression of GLUT1 and glucose uptake. We conclude that loss of function of PTEN increases the probability of cancer detection by FDG-PET or other glucose-based imaging diagnosis.

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