糖酵解
己糖激酶
细胞生长
新陈代谢
磷酸果糖激酶
癌细胞
MCF-7型
生物化学
碳水化合物代谢
厌氧糖酵解
化学
生物
癌症
人体乳房
遗传学
作者
Burhan Knouzy,Laurence Dubourg,Gabriel Baverel,Christian Michoudet
摘要
Abstract Chloroacetaldehyde (CAA), a product of hepatic metabolism of the widely used anticancer drug ifosfamide (IFO), has been reported to decrease cancer cell proliferation. The basis of this effect is not completely known but has been attributed to a drop of cellular ATP content. Given the importance of glucose metabolism and of the ‘Warburg effect’ in cancer cells, we examined in the present study the ability of CAA to inhibit cancer cell proliferation by altering the glycolytic pathway. Cell proliferation, ATP content, glucose transport and metabolism as well as the activities of the main enzymes of glycolysis were determined in human breast cancer cells MCF‐7 in the presence of various CAA concentrations (5–50 μ m ). Our results show that low CAA concentrations inhibited cell proliferation in a concentration‐dependent manner. This inhibition was explained by a decrease in glucose utilization. Cellular ATP content was not reduced but even increased with 25 μ m CAA. The inhibition of glucose metabolism was mainly explained by the decrease in glucose transport and hexokinase activity. The activity of glyceraldehyde‐3‐phosphate dehydrogenase, but not that of phosphofructokinase, was also inhibited. Glycolysis inhibition by CAA was effective in decreasing the proliferation of MCF‐7 cells. Interestingly, this decrease was not due to ATP depletion; rather, it was linked to a drop of biosynthetic precursors from glycolytic intermediates. This CAA‐induced inhibition of cell proliferation suggests that it might play a role in the antitumor activity of IFO. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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