AMPK: A metabolic checkpoint that regulates the growth of EGFR activated glioblastomas.

نویسندگان

  • Deliang Guo
  • Timothy F Cloughesy
  • Caius G Radu
  • Paul S Mischel
چکیده

Cancer is a genetic disease. Mutated oncogenes and tumor suppressor proteins activate signaling networks that underlie many of the characteristic hallmarks of cancer. Cancer is also a metabolic disease. Long before the identification of oncogenes, Otto Warburg showed that cancer cells consume large amounts of glucose relative to normal cells, forming the basis for 18FFDG PET imaging. Instead of complete oxidation of glucose, most of the glucosederived carbon in cancer cells is secreted as lactate, even under aerobic conditions. “Aerobic glycolysis,” despite yielding less ATP per glucose molecule, is sufficient to meet the energy demand of the rapidly dividing cancer cells while redirecting glycolytic intermediates towards anabolic processes, to meet the increased demand for biomass in rapidly proliferating cancer cells. Thus, the Warburg effect may help cancer cells meet multiple metabolic needs at once in a cell autonomous fashion unconstrained by systemic regulation. Many of the oncogenes and tumor suppressor proteins commonly mutated in cancer appear to regulate these metabolic changes including increased glucose uptake, the switch to the Warburg effect, and de novo lipogenesis. A map of the connectivity between signal transduction pathways and metabolic networks is emerging that could potentially be therapeutically exploited. The wiring map interconnecting signal transduction and cellular metabolism in cancer is in an early phase. Unexpected connections are likely to be uncovered. The B-RAF V600E mutation common in many types of cancer, including melanoma provides one such example. This mutation promotes melanoma cell proliferation through Erk and Rsk signaling. Surprisingly, ERK and Rsk phosphorylate the LKB1 tumor suppressor protein, impairing its ability to activate the metabolic checkpoint protein AMPactivated protein kinase (AMPK), an active suppressor of mTOR complex 1 signaling. Thus, a metabolic checkpoint interconnects two commonly deregulated canonical signaling pathways providing a potential new therapeutic target. Will the interconnections between signal transduction and cellular metabolism prove to be therapeutically exploitable? Recent work from our group uncovers an unexpected twist on the theme that suggests so. Glioblastoma, the most common malignant primary brain tumor of adults contains EGFR amplification and mutations, including EGFRvIII, a constitutively active and ligand-independent mutant oncogene that strongly promotes PI3K signaling. To date, EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors have been surprisingly ineffective in the clinic. Maintenance of signal flux through the PI3K/Akt/mTORC1 pathway, either as a consequence of PTEN loss, or via co-activation of other receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) is thought to be responsible, although failure to inhibit EGFR-mediated changes in cellular metabolism has also been implicated in therapeutic resistance to EGFR inhibitors. Attempts to target EGFR/PI3K signaling downstream at mTOR complex 1 with rapamycin or its analogs have also failed in glioblastoma patients the clinic, in large part due to feedback activation of PI3K signaling. Therefore, we set out to determine whether AMPK activation could block the growth of glioblastomas, and to assess whether EGFR activation regulated cellular response in vitro and in vivo. The AMPK agonist AICAR strongly inhibited the growth of glioblastoma cells in vitro, with markedly enhanced efficacy in EGFR-activated tumor cells. Transfection of the constitutively active EGFRvIII allele sensitized tumor cells to AICAR. Consistent with this observation, AICAR was highly efficacious at blocking tumor cell growth across a panel of EGFR-activated cancer cell lines, even in cancer cell lines that were relatively insensitive to the mTORC1 inhibitor rapamycin. Similar results were obtained using a constitutively activated AMPK adenovirus and another AMPK pharmacological. The AMPK-specific inhibitor compound C and AMPK siRNAs inhibited these effects, demonstrating that they were mediated through AMPK. Thus, AMPK is a potent negative regulator of glioblastoma cell growth, particularly in EGFRactivated tumors. mTORC1 is thought to be a primary target of AMPK. However, AICAR was more effective than rapamycin at blocking tumor cell growth despite being significantly less effective at suppressing downstream mTORC1 signaling. Reconstitution of PTEN diminished the anti-proliferative effect of rapamycin but not AICAR, suggesting that AMPK could potentially negatively regulating tumor growth through alternate pathways. AMPK phosphorylates a number of enzymes in addition to mTOR, including aMPK A metabolic checkpoint that regulates the growth of EGFR activated glioblastomas

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The AMPK agonist AICAR inhibits the growth of EGFRvIII-expressing glioblastomas by inhibiting lipogenesis.

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عنوان ژورنال:
  • Cell cycle

دوره 9 2  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2010