4.8 Article

Evidence for an Alternative Glycolytic Pathway in Rapidly Proliferating Cells

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 329, Issue 5998, Pages 1492-1499

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.1188015

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation
  2. Burroughs Wellcome Fund
  3. American Cancer Society
  4. Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center
  5. NIH [1K08CA136983, 5P30CA006516-43, 5 T32 CA009361-28, R21/R33 DK070299, P01GM047467, R01 AI078063, R21 CA128620, R01-GM56302, P01CA089021, 1P01CA120964-01A]

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Proliferating cells, including cancer cells, require altered metabolism to efficiently incorporate nutrients such as glucose into biomass. The M2 isoform of pyruvate kinase (PKM2) promotes the metabolism of glucose by aerobic glycolysis and contributes to anabolic metabolism. Paradoxically, decreased pyruvate kinase enzyme activity accompanies the expression of PKM2 in rapidly dividing cancer cells and tissues. We demonstrate that phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), the substrate for pyruvate kinase in cells, can act as a phosphate donor in mammalian cells because PEP participates in the phosphorylation of the glycolytic enzyme phosphoglycerate mutase (PGAM1) in PKM2-expressing cells. We used mass spectrometry to show that the phosphate from PEP is transferred to the catalytic histidine (His11) on human PGAM1. This reaction occurred at physiological concentrations of PEP and produced pyruvate in the absence of PKM2 activity. The presence of histidine-phosphorylated PGAM1 correlated with the expression of PKM2 in cancer cell lines and tumor tissues. Thus, decreased pyruvate kinase activity in PKM2-expressing cells allows PEP-dependent histidine phosphorylation of PGAM1 and may provide an alternate glycolytic pathway that decouples adenosine triphosphate production from PEP-mediated phosphotransfer, allowing for the high rate of glycolysis to support the anabolic metabolism observed in many proliferating cells.

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