Abstract

The PI3K/Akt pathway is activated in stimulated cells and in many cancers to promote glucose metabolism and prevent cell death. Although inhibition of Akt-mediated cell survival may provide a means to eliminate cancer cells, this survival pathway remains incompletely understood. In particular, unlike anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 family proteins that prevent apoptosis independent of glucose, Akt requires glucose metabolism to inhibit cell death. This glucose dependence may occur in part through metabolic regulation of pro-apoptotic Bcl-2 family proteins. Here, we show that activated Akt relies on glycolysis to inhibit induction of Puma, which was uniquely sensitive to metabolic status among pro-apoptotic Bcl-2 family members and was rapidly up-regulated in glucose-deficient conditions. Importantly, preventing Puma expression was critical for Akt-mediated cell survival, as Puma deficiency protected cells from glucose deprivation and Akt could not readily block Puma-mediated apoptosis. In contrast, the pro-apoptotic Bcl-2 family protein Bim was induced normally even when constitutively active Akt was expressed, yet Akt could provide protection from Bim cytotoxicity. Up-regulation of Puma appeared mediated by decreased availability of mitochondrial metabolites rather than glycolysis itself, as alternative mitochondrial fuels could suppress Puma induction and apoptosis upon glucose deprivation. Metabolic regulation of Puma was mediated through combined p53-dependent transcriptional induction and control of Puma protein stability, with Puma degraded in nutrient-replete conditions and long lived in nutrient deficiency. Together, these data identify a key role for Bcl-2 family proteins in Akt-mediated cell survival that may be critical in normal immunity and in cancer through Akt-dependent stimulation of glycolysis to suppress Puma expression.

Highlights

  • In principle, Akt may rely on glucose for several reasons

  • Akt Requires Glucose to Inhibit Apoptosis after Growth Factor Withdrawal—The phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/Akt pathway is activated in many cancers and can promote growth factor-independent glucose metabolism and survival

  • We examined the ability of methyl pyruvate (MePyr) to protect activated Bim- and Puma-deficient T cells from apoptosis upon glucose deprivation

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Summary

The abbreviations used are

T-ALL, T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia; MePyr, methyl-pyruvate; myrAkt, myristoylated Akt; PI, propidium iodide; ER, endoplasmic reticulum. Even in the presence of growth factor, glucose deprivation leads to induction and activation of the pro-apoptotic Bcl-2 proteins Bim, Puma (19), and Bax (22, 23), as well as decreased Mcl-1 expression (20). These changes in the balance of anti- and pro-apoptotic Bcl-2 family members appear critical to elicit apoptosis, as expression of the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-xL or deficiency of the pro-apoptotic proteins Bim, Puma, or Bax allows cells to survive glucose deprivation for prolonged periods (12, 19, 22, 23). Through analysis of Bcl-2 family members, these data show that constitutively active Akt drives glycolysis to inhibit expression of the pro-apoptotic BH3-only protein Puma, and this metabolic checkpoint is essential for Akt-mediated cell survival

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