Abstract

Molecular oxygen is the final electron acceptor in cellular metabolism but cancer cells often become adaptive to hypoxia, which promotes resistance to chemotherapy and radiation. The reduction of endogenous glycolytic pyruvate to lactate is known as an adaptive strategy for hypoxic cells. Whether exogenous pyruvate is required for hypoxic cell proliferation by either serving as an electron acceptor or a biosynthetic substrate remains unclear. By using both hypoxic and ρ0 cells defective in electron transfer chain, we show that exogenous pyruvate is required to sustain proliferation of both cancer and non-cancer cells that cannot utilize oxygen. Particularly, we show that absence of pyruvate led to glycolysis inhibition and AMPK activation along with decreased NAD+ levels in ρ0 cells; and exogenous pyruvate increases lactate yield, elevates NAD+/NADH ratio and suppresses AMPK activation. Knockdown of lactate dehydrogenase significantly inhibits the rescuing effects of exogenous pyruvate. In contrast, none of pyruvate-derived metabolites tested (including acetyl-CoA, α-ketoglutarate, succinate and alanine) can replace pyruvate in supporting ρ0 cell proliferation. Knockdown of pyruvate carboxylase, pyruvate dehydrogenase and citrate synthase do not impair exogenous pyruvate to rescue ρ0 cells. Importantly, we show that exogenous pyruvate relieves ATP insufficiency and mTOR inhibition and promotes proliferation of hypoxic cells, and that well-oxygenated cells release pyruvate, providing a potential in vivo source of pyruvate. Taken together, our data support a novel pyruvate cycle model in which oxygenated cells release pyruvate for hypoxic cells as an oxygen surrogate. The pyruvate cycle may be targeted as a new therapy of hypoxic cancers.

Highlights

  • Cell survival, proliferation and other cellular functions require constitutive supply of molecular oxygen and nutrients to maintain ATP production, redox homeostasis, and biosynthesis [1]

  • We showed that exogenous pyruvate significantly alleviated the inhibitory effects of electron transport chain (ETC) deficiency and hypoxia on both cancer cells (143B206, 143B, HeLa and Hep3B) and non-cancer cells (H9c2, rat cardiomyocytes)

  • Whereas pyruvate may play a role in anaplerosis and participates in multiple biosynthetic pathways, we demonstrate that the rescuing effect of exogenous pyruvate for hypoxic cells is mainly by acting as an oxygen surrogate to accept electrons, maintaining cellular NAD+ levels to ensure the continuation of glycolysis and ATP production

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Summary

Introduction

Proliferation and other cellular functions require constitutive supply of molecular oxygen and nutrients to maintain ATP production, redox homeostasis, and biosynthesis [1]. Hypoxia impairs mitochondrial respiration and decreases ATP production, and causes accumulation of NADH along with NAD+ depletion [3]. It has been reported that hypoxia leads to formation of excessive reactive oxygen species (ROS), superoxide, causing oxidative stress [4, 5]. HIF-1 transcriptionally reprograms glucose metabolism, shifting ATP production from oxygen-dependent oxidative phosphorylation to NAD+-dependent glycolysis [6]. Hypoxia activates HIF-1 functions and transcriptionally upregulates the expression of glucose transporters, glycolytic enzymes and regulatory proteins of glycolysis. HIF-1-stimulated expression of lactate dehydrogenases (LDH) accelerates www.impactjournals.com/oncotarget the conversion of endogenous pyruvate generated from glycolysis to lactate, recovering NAD+ by accepting electrons from NADH, maintaining a continuous glycolysis without complete NAD+ exhaustion [10]

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