Abstract Cancer cells have been known to alter their metabolic processes in order to survive and proliferate. Normally in muscle and liver, excess glucose is stored within the cells as glycogen. Elevated levels of glycogen have also been found in various cancers, including breast cancers. Recent studies have implicated glycogen metabolism as important in promoting survival of cancer cells, suggesting targeting of glycogen metabolism as a possible treatment to inhibit cancer cell growth. In general, modulation of cancer metabolism is believed to be an attractive adjunct strategy to conventional or targeted therapies. Here we set out to investigate glycogen levels as well as levels of proteins involved in glycogen synthesis and degradation vary across different breast cancer cell lines. A glucose metabolism qPCR array found differential levels of the alpha subunit of phosphorylase kinase 1, a key enzyme involved in glycogen degradation among three different breast cancer cell lines. Expression levels of glycogen synthesis and degradation enzymes were assessed using qPCR and immunoblot in various breast cancer cell lines. Glycogen levels in these breast cancer cell lines were quantified using an amyloglucosidase reaction coupled with other enzymatic reactions to produce a fluorescent product. It was found that MDA-MB-231, SUM149, and MCF7 cell lines had increased levels of glycogen, between 6.5 and 23.5 μg glycogen per mg protein, whereas SUM190 and normal-like breast epithelial cell line MCF10A had undetectable levels of glycogen. These findings demonstrate that glycogen metabolism can vary widely amongst cancer types, indicating that therapies targeted to disrupt glycogen degradation may produce differential results and that further study of the role of glycogen metabolism in cancer is warranted. Citation Format: Joel A. Yates, Megan Altemus, Zhifen Wu, Michelle L. Wynn, Sofia D. Merajver. Differential levels of glycogen in breast cancer cell lines: A potential new target. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 107th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2016 Apr 16-20; New Orleans, LA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2016;76(14 Suppl):Abstract nr 1040.
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