Saltar al contenido
Merck

Enhanced amino acid utilization sustains growth of cells lacking Snf1/AMPK.

Biochimica et biophysica acta (2015-04-07)
Raffaele Nicastro, Farida Tripodi, Cinzia Guzzi, Veronica Reghellin, Sakda Khoomrung, Claudia Capusoni, Concetta Compagno, Cristina Airoldi, Jens Nielsen, Lilia Alberghina, Paola Coccetti
RESUMEN

The metabolism of proliferating cells shows common features even in evolutionary distant organisms such as mammals and yeasts, for example the requirement for anabolic processes under tight control of signaling pathways. Analysis of the rewiring of metabolism, which occurs following the dysregulation of signaling pathways, provides new knowledge about the mechanisms underlying cell proliferation. The key energy regulator in yeast Snf1 and its mammalian ortholog AMPK have earlier been shown to have similar functions at glucose limited conditions and here we show that they also have analogies when grown with glucose excess. We show that loss of Snf1 in cells growing in 2% glucose induces an extensive transcriptional reprogramming, enhances glycolytic activity, fatty acid accumulation and reliance on amino acid utilization for growth. Strikingly, we demonstrate that Snf1/AMPK-deficient cells remodel their metabolism fueling mitochondria and show glucose and amino acids addiction, a typical hallmark of cancer cells.

MATERIALES
Número de producto
Marca
Descripción del producto

Sigma-Aldrich
Acetonitrilo, anhydrous, 99.8%
En este momento no podemos mostrarle ni los precios ni la disponibilidad
Sigma-Aldrich
Acetonitrilo, electronic grade, 99.999% trace metals basis
En este momento no podemos mostrarle ni los precios ni la disponibilidad
Sigma-Aldrich
tert-Butyldimethylsilane, 95%
En este momento no podemos mostrarle ni los precios ni la disponibilidad
Sigma-Aldrich
Acetonitrilo
En este momento no podemos mostrarle ni los precios ni la disponibilidad
Sigma-Aldrich
Etanol, absolute, sales not in Germany, ≥99.8% (vol.)
En este momento no podemos mostrarle ni los precios ni la disponibilidad