SummaryPhosphofructokinase (PFK) is a major regulatory glycolytic enzyme and is considered to be the pacemaker of glycolysis. This enzyme presents a puzzling regulatory mechanism that is modulated by a large variety of metabolites, drugs, and intracellular proteins. To date, the mammalian enzyme structure has not yet been resolved. However, it is known that PFK undergoes an intricate oligomerization process, shifting among monomers, dimers, tetramers, and more complex oligomeric structures. The equilibrium between PFK dimers and tetramers is directly correlated with the enzyme regulation, because the dimer exhibits very low catalytic activity, whereas the tetramer is fully active. Several PFK ligands modulate the enzyme, favoring the formation of its dimers or tetramers. The present review integrates recent findings regarding the regulatory aspects of muscle type PFK and discusses their relation to the control of metabolism.
IUBMBIUBMB Life, 62(11): 791-796, 2010
Cancer cells are highly dependent on glycolysis to supply the energy and intermediates required for cell growth and proliferation. The enzyme 6-phosphofructo-1-kinase (PFK) is critical for glycolysis, and its activity is directly correlated with cellular glucose consumption. Resveratrol is a potential anti-tumoral drug that decreases glucose metabolism and viability in cancer cells. However, the mechanism involved in resveratrol-mediated anti-tumor activity is not entirely clear. In this work, it is demonstrated that resveratrol decreases viability, glucose consumption and ATP content in the human breast cancer cell line MCF-7. These effects are directly correlated with PFK inhibition by resveratrol in these cells. Moreover, resveratrol directly inhibits purified PFK, promoting the dissociation of the enzyme from fully active tetramers into less active dimers. This effect is exacerbated by known negative regulators of the enzyme, such as ATP and citrate. On the other hand, positive modulators that stabilize the tetrameric form of the enzyme, such as fructose-2,6-bisphosphate and ADP, prevent the inhibition of PFK activity by resveratrol, an effect not observed with increased pH. In summary, our results provide evidence that resveratrol directly inhibits PFK activity, therefore disrupting glucose metabolism and reducing viability in cancer cells.
BackgroundClotrimazole is an azole derivative with promising anti-cancer effects. This drug interferes with the activity of glycolytic enzymes altering their cellular distribution and inhibiting their activities. The aim of the present study was to analyze the effects of clotrimazole on the growth pattern of breast cancer cells correlating with their metabolic profiles.Methodology/Principal FindingsThree cell lines derived from human breast tissue (MCF10A, MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231) that present increasingly aggressive profiles were used. Clotrimazole induces a dose-dependent decrease in glucose uptake in all three cell lines, with Ki values of 114.3±11.7, 77.1±7.8 and 37.8±4.2 µM for MCF10A, MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231, respectively. Furthermore, the drug also decreases intracellular ATP content and inhibits the major glycolytic enzymes, hexokinase, phosphofructokinase-1 and pyruvate kinase, especially in the highly metastatic cell line, MDA-MB-231. In this last cell lineage, clotrimazole attenuates the robust migratory response, an effect that is progressively attenuated in MCF-7 and MCF10A, respectively. Moreover, clotrimazole reduces the viability of breast cancer cells, which is more pronounced on MDA-MB-231.Conclusions/SignificanceClotrimazole presents deleterious effects on two human breast cancer cell lines metabolism, growth and migration, where the most aggressive cell line is more affected by the drug. Moreover, clotrimazole presents little or no effect on a non-tumor human breast cell line. These results suggest, at least for these three cell lines studied, that the more aggressive the cell is the more effective clotrimazole is.
For a long period lactate was considered as a dead-end product of glycolysis in many cells and its accumulation correlated with acidosis and cellular and tissue damage. At present, the role of lactate in several physiological processes has been investigated based on its properties as an energy source, a signalling molecule and as essential for tissue repair. It is noteworthy that lactate accumulation alters glycolytic flux independently from medium acidification, thereby this compound can regulate glucose metabolism within cells. PFK (6-phosphofructo-1-kinase) is the key regulatory glycolytic enzyme which is regulated by diverse molecules and signals. PFK activity is directly correlated with cellular glucose consumption. The present study shows the property of lactate to down-regulate PFK activity in a specific manner which is not dependent on acidification of the medium. Lactate reduces the affinity of the enzyme for its substrates, ATP and fructose 6-phosphate, as well as reducing the affinity for ATP at its allosteric inhibitory site at the enzyme. Moreover, we demonstrated that lactate inhibits PFK favouring the dissociation of enzyme active tetramers into less active dimers. This effect can be prevented by tetramer-stabilizing conditions such as the presence of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate, the binding of PFK to f-actin and phosphorylation of the enzyme by protein kinase A. In conclusion, our results support evidence that lactate regulates the glycolytic flux through modulating PFK due to its effects on the enzyme quaternary structure.
Glycolytic enzymes reversibly associate with the human erythrocyte membrane (EM) as part of their regulatory mechanism. The site for this association has been described as the amino terminus of band 3, a transmembrane anion transporter. Binding of glycolytic enzymes to this site is recognized to inhibit glycolysis, since binding inhibits the catalytic activity of these enzymes, including the rate-limiting enzyme 6-phosphofructo-1-kinase (PFK). However, the existence of a putative stimulatory site for glycolytic enzymes within the EM has been proposed. PFK has been described as able to reversibly associate with other proteins, such as microtubules, which inhibit the enzyme, and filamentous actin, which activates the enzyme. Here, it is demonstrated that PFK also binds to actin filaments and its associated binding proteins in the protein meshwork that forms the erythrocyte cytoskeleton. Through fluorescence resonance energy transfer experiments using either confocal microscopy or fluorescence spectroscopy, we show that, within the EM, PFK and actin filaments containing its associated binding proteins are located close enough to propose binding between them. Moreover, specifically blocking PFK binding to band 3 results in an association of the enzyme with the EM that increases the enzyme's catalytic activity. Conversely, disruption of the association between PFK and actin filaments containing its associated binding proteins potentiates the inhibitory action of the EM on the enzyme. Furthermore, it is shown that insulin signaling increases the association of PFK to actin filaments and its associated binding proteins, revealing that this event may play a role on the stimulatory effects of insulin on erythrocyte glycolysis. In summary, the present work presents evidence that filamentous actin and its associated binding proteins are the stimulatory site for PFK within the EM.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.