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Metabolic adaptations to acute glucose uptake inhibition converge upon mitochondrial respiration for leukemia cell survival.

Authors :
Komza, Monika
Khatun, Jesminara
Gelles, Jesse D.
Trotta, Andrew P.
Abraham-Enachescu, Ioana
Henao, Juan
Elsaadi, Ahmed
Kotini, Andriana G.
Clementelli, Cara
Arandela, JoAnn
Ghaity-Beckley, Sebastian El
Barua, Agneesh
Chen, Yiyang
Berisa, Mirela
Marcellino, Bridget K.
Papapetrou, Eirini P.
Poyurovsky, Masha V.
Chipuk, Jerry Edward
Source :
Cell Communication & Signaling. 1/25/2025, p1-23. 23p.
Publication Year :
2025

Abstract

One hallmark of cancer is the upregulation and dependency on glucose metabolism to fuel macromolecule biosynthesis and rapid proliferation. Despite significant pre-clinical effort to exploit this pathway, additional mechanistic insights are necessary to prioritize the diversity of metabolic adaptations upon acute loss of glucose metabolism. Here, we investigated a potent small molecule inhibitor to Class I glucose transporters, KL-11743, using glycolytic leukemia cell lines and patient-based model systems. Our results reveal that while several metabolic adaptations occur in response to acute glucose uptake inhibition, the most critical is increased mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. KL-11743 treatment efficiently blocks the majority of glucose uptake and glycolysis, yet markedly increases mitochondrial respiration via enhanced Complex I function. Compared to partial glucose uptake inhibition, dependency on mitochondrial respiration is less apparent suggesting robust blockage of glucose uptake is essential to create a metabolic vulnerability. When wild-type and oncogenic RAS patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cell acute myeloid leukemia (AML) models were examined, KL-11743 mediated induction of mitochondrial respiration and dependency for survival associated with oncogenic RAS. Furthermore, we examined the therapeutic potential of these observations by treating a cohort of primary AML patient samples with KL-11743 and witnessed similar dependency on mitochondrial respiration for sustained cellular survival. Together, these data highlight conserved adaptations to acute glucose uptake inhibition in diverse leukemic models and AML patient samples, and position mitochondrial respiration as a key determinant of treatment success. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1478811X
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Cell Communication & Signaling
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
182441077
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12964-025-02044-y