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Epithelial Mesenchymal Transition Induces Aberrant Glycosylation through Hexosamine Biosynthetic Pathway Activation.

Authors :
Lucena MC
Carvalho-Cruz P
Donadio JL
Oliveira IA
de Queiroz RM
Marinho-Carvalho MM
Sola-Penna M
de Paula IF
Gondim KC
McComb ME
Costello CE
Whelan SA
Todeschini AR
Dias WB
Source :
The Journal of biological chemistry [J Biol Chem] 2016 Jun 17; Vol. 291 (25), pp. 12917-29. Date of Electronic Publication: 2016 Apr 18.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Deregulated cellular metabolism is a hallmark of tumors. Cancer cells increase glucose and glutamine flux to provide energy needs and macromolecular synthesis demands. Several studies have been focused on the importance of glycolysis and pentose phosphate pathway. However, a neglected but very important branch of glucose metabolism is the hexosamine biosynthesis pathway (HBP). The HBP is a branch of the glucose metabolic pathway that consumes ∼2-5% of the total glucose, generating UDP-GlcNAc as the end product. UDP-GlcNAc is the donor substrate used in multiple glycosylation reactions. Thus, HBP links the altered metabolism with aberrant glycosylation providing a mechanism for cancer cells to sense and respond to microenvironment changes. Here, we investigate the changes of glucose metabolism during epithelial mesenchymal transition (EMT) and the role of O-GlcNAcylation in this process. We show that A549 cells increase glucose uptake during EMT, but instead of increasing the glycolysis and pentose phosphate pathway, the glucose is shunted through the HBP. The activation of HBP induces an aberrant cell surface glycosylation and O-GlcNAcylation. The cell surface glycans display an increase of sialylation α2-6, poly-LacNAc, and fucosylation, all known epitopes found in different tumor models. In addition, modulation of O-GlcNAc levels was demonstrated to be important during the EMT process. Taken together, our results indicate that EMT is an applicable model to study metabolic and glycophenotype changes during carcinogenesis, suggesting that cell glycosylation senses metabolic changes and modulates cell plasticity.<br /> (© 2016 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1083-351X
Volume :
291
Issue :
25
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of biological chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
27129262
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M116.729236