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      Mitochondrial respiration defects in cancer cells cause activation of Akt survival pathway through a redox-mediated mechanism

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          Abstract

          Cancer cells exhibit increased glycolysis for ATP production due, in part, to respiration injury (the Warburg effect). Because ATP generation through glycolysis is less efficient than through mitochondrial respiration, how cancer cells with this metabolic disadvantage can survive the competition with other cells and eventually develop drug resistance is a long-standing paradox. We report that mitochondrial respiration defects lead to activation of the Akt survival pathway through a novel mechanism mediated by NADH. Respiration-deficient cells (ρ -) harboring mitochondrial DNA deletion exhibit dependency on glycolysis, increased NADH, and activation of Akt, leading to drug resistance and survival advantage in hypoxia. Similarly, chemical inhibition of mitochondrial respiration and hypoxia also activates Akt. The increase in NADH caused by respiratory deficiency inactivates PTEN through a redox modification mechanism, leading to Akt activation. These findings provide a novel mechanistic insight into the Warburg effect and explain how metabolic alteration in cancer cells may gain a survival advantage and withstand therapeutic agents.

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          Most cited references57

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          On the origin of cancer cells.

          O WARBURG (1956)
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            Akt stimulates aerobic glycolysis in cancer cells.

            Cancer cells frequently display high rates of aerobic glycolysis in comparison to their nontransformed counterparts, although the molecular basis of this phenomenon remains poorly understood. Constitutive activity of the serine/threonine kinase Akt is a common perturbation observed in malignant cells. Surprisingly, although Akt activity is sufficient to promote leukemogenesis in nontransformed hematopoietic precursors and maintenance of Akt activity was required for rapid disease progression, the expression of activated Akt did not increase the proliferation of the premalignant or malignant cells in culture. However, Akt stimulated glucose consumption in transformed cells without affecting the rate of oxidative phosphorylation. High rates of aerobic glycolysis were also identified in human glioblastoma cells possessing but not those lacking constitutive Akt activity. Akt-expressing cells were more susceptible than control cells to death after glucose withdrawal. These data suggest that activation of the Akt oncogene is sufficient to stimulate the switch to aerobic glycolysis characteristic of cancer cells and that Akt activity renders cancer cells dependent on aerobic glycolysis for continued growth and survival.
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              Mitochondrial diseases in man and mouse.

              Over the past 10 years, mitochondrial defects have been implicated in a wide variety of degenerative diseases, aging, and cancer. Studies on patients with these diseases have revealed much about the complexities of mitochondrial genetics, which involves an interplay between mutations in the mitochondrial and nuclear genomes. However, the pathophysiology of mitochondrial diseases has remained perplexing. The essential role of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation in cellular energy production, the generation of reactive oxygen species, and the initiation of apoptosis has suggested a number of novel mechanisms for mitochondrial pathology. The importance and interrelationship of these functions are now being studied in mouse models of mitochondrial disease.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Cell Biol
                jcb
                The Journal of Cell Biology
                The Rockefeller University Press
                0021-9525
                1540-8140
                18 December 2006
                : 175
                : 6
                : 913-923
                Affiliations
                Departments of [1 ]Molecular Pathology, [2 ]Pathology, [3 ]Leukemia, and [4 ]Experimental Therapeutics, University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77030
                [5 ]Department of Medical Oncology, Sun-Yat Sen University Cancer Center, Guangzhou 510060, China
                Author notes

                Correspondence to Peng Huang: phuang@ 123456mdanderson.org

                Article
                200512100
                10.1083/jcb.200512100
                2064701
                17158952
                d299e072-b95d-4901-8d7d-910e721d6b28
                Copyright © 2006, The Rockefeller University Press
                History
                : 19 December 2005
                : 7 November 2006
                Categories
                Research Articles
                Article

                Cell biology
                Cell biology

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