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Slow TCA flux and ATP production in primary solid tumours but not metastases

Authors :
Bartman, Caroline R.
Weilandt, Daniel R.
Shen, Yihui
Lee, Won Dong
Han, Yujiao
TeSlaa, Tara
Jankowski, Connor S. R.
Samarah, Laith
Park, Noel R.
da Silva-Diz, Victoria
Aleksandrova, Maya
Gultekin, Yetis
Marishta, Argit
Wang, Lin
Yang, Lifeng
Roichman, Asael
Bhatt, Vrushank
Lan, Taijin
Hu, Zhixian
Xing, Xi
Lu, Wenyun
Davidson, Shawn
Wühr, Martin
Vander Heiden, Matthew G.
Herranz, Daniel
Guo, Jessie Yanxiang
Kang, Yibin
Rabinowitz, Joshua D.
Source :
Nature; February 2023, Vol. 614 Issue: 7947 p349-357, 9p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Tissues derive ATP from two pathways—glycolysis and the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle coupled to the electron transport chain. Most energy in mammals is produced via TCA metabolism1. In tumours, however, the absolute rates of these pathways remain unclear. Here we optimize tracer infusion approaches to measure the rates of glycolysis and the TCA cycle in healthy mouse tissues, Kras-mutant solid tumours, metastases and leukaemia. Then, given the rates of these two pathways, we calculate total ATP synthesis rates. We find that TCA cycle flux is suppressed in all five primary solid tumour models examined and is increased in lung metastases of breast cancer relative to primary orthotopic tumours. As expected, glycolysis flux is increased in tumours compared with healthy tissues (the Warburg effect2,3), but this increase is insufficient to compensate for low TCA flux in terms of ATP production. Thus, instead of being hypermetabolic, as commonly assumed, solid tumours generally produce ATP at a slower than normal rate. In mouse pancreatic cancer, this is accommodated by the downregulation of protein synthesis, one of this tissue’s major energy costs. We propose that, as solid tumours develop, cancer cells shed energetically expensive tissue-specific functions, enabling uncontrolled growth despite a limited ability to produce ATP.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836 and 14764687
Volume :
614
Issue :
7947
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs62159912
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-05661-6