Abstract

Muscle type of pyruvate kinase (PKM) is one of the key mediators of the Warburg effect and tumor metabolism. Due to alternative splicing, there are at least 12 known isoforms of the PKM gene, of which PKM1 and PKM2 are two major isoforms with only a 23 amino acid sequenced difference but quite different characteristics and functions. It was previously thought the isoform switch from PKM1 to PKM2 resulted in high PKM2 expression in tumors, providing a great advantage to tumor cells. However, this traditional view was challenged by two recent studies; one study claimed that this isoform switch does not occur during the Warburg effect; the other study asserted that the isoform switch is tissue-specific. Here, we re-analyzed the RNA sequencing data of 25 types of human tumors from The Cancer Genome Atlas Data Portal, and confirmed that PKM2 was the major isoform in the tumors and was highly elevated in addition to the entire PKM gene. We further demonstrated that the expression level of PKM1 significantly declined even though there was substantially increased expression of the entire PKM gene. The proportion of PKM1 in total transcript variants also significantly declined in tumors but the proportion of PKM2 did not change accordingly. Therefore, we conclude that the isoform switch of PKM1 does indeed occur, but it switches to other isoforms rather than PKM2. Considering the change in the expression levels of PKM1, PKM2 and the entire PKM gene, we propose that the upregulation of PKM2 is primarily due to elevated transcriptional levels of the entire PKM gene, instead of the isoform switch.

Highlights

  • Numerous metabolic changes during tumorigenesis have received increased attention in recent years

  • Uc002atw.1 and uc002atx.1 are translated to PKM1, and uc002aty.1 is translated to PKM2

  • We examined the mRNA profile of PKM in many types of human tumors based on The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) data

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Numerous metabolic changes during tumorigenesis have received increased attention in recent years. The best known and probably most central change is the unusually high rate of glycolysis and lactate production, which was originally described by Otto Warburg in the 1920s, and was subsequently termed the Warburg effect. The mechanisms underlying the Warburg effect are not completely understood, it is widely thought that muscle type of pyruvate kinase (PKM) plays a key role. Isoform Switch of PKM1 Occurs but Not to PKM2 in Human Cancer

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call