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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (
glioma
)
30,880
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We used 31P-NMR spectroscopy to investigate the response of living C6
glioma
cells to stimulation by a beta-adrenergic agonist, isoproterenol. In the presence of 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine, stimulation induced an accumulation of cAMP, making possible the NMR detection of the second messenger in living cells grown on microcarrier beads and perfused in the NMR tube. The cAMP signal rose to a maximum level within 20-25 min of stimulation; thereafter it decreased to the detection threshold within 60 min. At the same time, 40% increases of phosphomonoester and diphosphodiester signals were observed, whereas no significant change in phosphocreatine and nucleotide signals was detected. The kinetics of changes of the cellular content in phosphorylated metabolites were analyzed after recording 31P-NMR spectra of cell perchloric acid extracts as a function of time of stimulation. cAMP accumulation in stimulated cells was evidenced by a near linear increase of its NMR signal as a function of incubation time (from 0 to 60 min). Concomitantly with the production of cAMP, the data showed 30% decreases of phosphocreatine and ATP levels within 60 min of stimulation, and an unexpected redistribution of pyrimidine and purine nucleoside triphosphates. At the same time, levels of phosphomonoesters (phosphorylcholine and phosphorylethanolamine) and phosphodiesters (glycerophosphorylcholine and glycerophosphorylethanolamine) rose (50% increase). 13C-NMR spectra of cell perchloric acid extracts prepared after isoproterenol stimulation of cells incubated in the presence of [1-13C]glucose indicated a higher glucose content in stimulated cells, whereas the resonance of ribose C1 was diminished. Moreover, the resonances of C1 of ethanolamine and choline (and their derivatives) were increased in spectra of stimulated cells, whereas that of C3 of serine was decreased. In addition, the 13C-NMR data indicated that neither the pattern of glutamate carbon enrichment nor the glutamate/glutamine ratio was modified in stimulated cells. On the other hand, the heteronuclear coupling pattern of the lactate (methyl group) resonance in 1H-NMR spectra of cell incubation media indicated that no change occurred in the carbon flux through the
pentose
-phosphate shunt under stimulation. The results of this multinuclear NMR approach are discussed in terms of metabolic responses of C6 cells to beta-adrenergic stimulation and cAMP overproduction.
...
PMID:Beta-adrenergic stimulation of C6 glioma cells: effects of cAMP overproduction on cellular metabolites. A multinuclear NMR study. 133 May 56
The key enzymes of oxidative phosphorylation and glycolysis were evaluated histochemically in rat-implanted C6 gliomas using spot densitometry. Hexokinase, the initial enzyme for the glycolysis pathway, was 40% higher within tumour than the contralateral cerebral cortex. A similar increase within tumours for 2-deoxyglucose was observed by autoradiography. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH), which is the first enzyme in the
pentose
phosphate pathway, shunting glucose towards nucleic acid synthesis, was more than 300% higher in gliomas compared with the normal cortex. In contrast, enzymes in the energy producing tricarboxylic acid cycle (succinate-, isocitrate-, and malate-dehydrogenase) and in the electron-transport system (cytochrome c oxidase) were significantly reduced in tumour (58% less than the contralateral cortex). Lactate dehydrogenase activity, which converts pyruvate to lactate, was 50% higher within tumour. Significant reductions of enzymatic activities also occurred in non-neoplastic tissue in ipsilateral hemisphere, with larger tumours. Some enzymes showed heterogeneous activity within tumours, especially G6PDH. These results suggest that: (1) energy production is more dependent on lactate production than on oxidative phosphorylation in C6
glioma
, and (2) a significant part of the increased glucose utilization in
glioma
cells is due to increased activity of the
pentose
phosphate shunt for increased DNA synthesis, and not energy production.
...
PMID:Histochemical evaluation of energy metabolism in rat glioma. 136 Jun 22
The enzymes of glycolysis and selected enzymes of the
pentose
phosphate pathways were measured by fluorometric methods in extracts prepared from cultures of normal cortical human astrocytes and from cultures derived from low-grade (II) or high-grade (IV) gliomas. The hexokinase and phosphofructokinase levels of the low-grade
glioma
-derived line were not significantly different from those of the normal astrocyte cultures. However, the activities of hexokinase and phosphofructokinase were consistently and significantly increased in the high-grade
glioma
-derived lines. The activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase was significantly decreased in all
glioma
-derived lines and by more than 90% in the high-grade-derived lines. Other enzymes of the glycolytic pathway were not significantly different from those of normal astrocytes, or they showed a variation inconsistently related to the neoplastic state. Glucose flux is not apparently regulated to a significant degree of hexokinase in
glioma
-derived lines, since the measured Vmax values are in substantial excess over the measured flux rates. Reversible binding of hexokinase to the particulate fraction was observed in both the normal astrocytes cultures and the high-grade
glioma
-derived lines. A twofold displacement of particulate hexokinase by ATP, ADP, 1-O-methylglucose, sorbitol-6-phosphate, and dibutyryl cyclic AMP was observed in the high-grade
glioma
-derived lines. The degree of displacement by various agents and the basal ratio of free/bound was not significantly different between the transformers and the nontransformants. The hexokinase from both the gliomas and the normal astrocytes was noncompetitively inhibited by the glucose analogue 2-deoxy-d-glucose. Phosphofructokinase activity is close to the observed glucose flux rates in both the normal astrocyte and the
glioma
-derived cultures. The phosphofructokinase activity of normal astrocytes is activated twofold or more by ADP, AMP, fructose-2,6-diphosphate, and Pi. However, these same ligands activate phosphofructokinase by less than twofold in a typical high-grade
glioma
-derived line. ATP, dibutyryl cyclic AMP, and citrate inhibit
glioma
and normal astrocytic phosphofructokinase, but the magnitude of the inhibition is much less than in the
glioma
-derived lines.
...
PMID:Enzymes of glucose metabolism in cultured human gliomas: neoplasia is accompanied by altered hexokinase, phosphofructokinase, and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase levels. 297 16
Several aspects of the regulation of the
pentose
phosphate pathway were examined in cultured normal human cortical astrocytes and gliomas of pathological grades I-IV. The generation of radiolabeled CO2 from [1-14C]glucose by the oxidative arm of the
pentose
phosphate pathway is a saturable process and has a maximum flux rate of 8-9 nmol/hr/mg cell protein. The flux can be blocked by the glycolytic inhibitor iodoacetamide but is unaffected by agents which inhibit oxidative phosphorylation. The magnitude of the
pentose
phosphate flux is directly related to the
glioma
grade. Grade IV gliomas (glioblastoma) show a
pentose
phosphate flux rate of approximately 4% of the total glucose flux. The flux rate can be increased by pharmacological agents which decrease the NADPH/NADP+ ratio. Both the activity and the regulation of
glioma
glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH) are altered in high-grade gliomas. While the affinity constants for cofactors in whole homogenates were not significantly different in
glioma
or normal astrocyte homogenates, normal astrocytes have a lower Km for glucose-6-phosphate and a G6PDH activity which is 10-fold greater than that of gliomas. NADPH is a powerful regulator of G6PDH activity in the normal astrocytes and in gliomas. At a NADPH/NADP+ ratio of 7:1 the normal astrocyte G6PDH is entirely inhibited, while the
glioma
enzyme is only 70% inhibited even at a ratio of 20:1. Increased metabolic flux through the oxidative arm of the
pentose
phosphate pathway is apparently due to an altered form of G6PDH.
...
PMID:Regulation of the pentose phosphate pathway in human astrocytes and gliomas. 350 33
Cerebral
pentose
phosphate pathway (PPP) activity has been linked to NADPH-dependent anabolic pathways, turnover of neurotransmitters, and protection from oxidative stress. Research on this potentially important pathway has been hampered, however, because measurement of regional cerebral PPP activity in vivo has not been possible. Our efforts to address this need focused on the use of a novel isotopically substituted glucose molecule, [1,6-13C2,6,6-2H2]glucose, in conjunction with microdialysis techniques, to measure cerebral PPP activity in vivo, in freely moving rats. Metabolism of [1,6-13C2,6,6-2H2]glucose through glycolysis produces [3-13C]lactate and [3-13C,3,3-2H2]lactate, whereas metabolism through the PPP produces [3-13C,3,3-2H2]lactate and unlabeled lactate. The ratios of these lactate isotopomers can be quantified using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) for calculation of PPP activity, which is reported as the percentage of glucose metabolized to lactate that passed through the PPP. Following addition of [1,6-13C2,6,6-2H2]glucose to the perfusate, labeled lactate was easily detectable in dialysate using GC/MS. Basal forebrain and intracerebral 9L
glioma
PPP values (mean +/- SD) were 3.5 +/- 0.4 (n = 4) and 6.2 +/- 0.9% (n = 4), respectively. Furthermore, PPP activity could be stimulated in vivo by addition of phenazine methosulfate, an artificial electron acceptor for NADPH, to the perfusion stream. These results show that the activity of the PPP can now be measured dynamically and regionally in the brains of conscious animals in vivo.
...
PMID:Dynamic measurements of cerebral pentose phosphate pathway activity in vivo using [1,6-13C2,6,6-2H2]glucose and microdialysis. 786 Nov 66
The isotopically substituted molecule (6-13C, 1, 6, 6-2H3)glucose was evaluated to determine whether metabolic 2H loss would prevent its use in quantitating
pentose
phosphate pathway (PPP) activity. PPP activity causes the C1 of glucose to be lost as CO2, while C6 can appear in lactate. 2H NMR analysis of the lactate produced from this glucose can distinguish (3-2H)-lactate (from C1 of glucose) from (3-13C, 3, 3-2H2)lactate (from C6 of glucose). 2H NMR spectroscopic analysis of medium containing (6-13C, 1, 6, 6-2H3)glucose after incubation with cultured rat 9L
glioma
cells suggested a 30.8 +/- 2.1% PPP activity as compared with 6.0 +/- 0.8% from separate, parallel incubations with (1-13C)glucose and (6-13C)glucose. Subsequent experiments with other isotopically labeled glucose molecules suggest that this discrepancy is due to selective loss of 2H from the C1 position of glucose, catalyzed by phosphomannose isomerase. Failure to consider 2H exchange from the C1 and C6 positions of glucose can lead to incorrect conclusions in metabolic studies utilizing this and other deuterated or tritiated glucose molecules.
...
PMID:Metabolic loss of deuterium from isotopically labeled glucose. 798 74
The role played by endothelin-1 and intercellular communication mediated by gap junctions in the regulation of glucose disposal by astrocytes has been studied in primary culture. Endothelin-1 increased glucose uptake by astrocytes as did one of its putative messenger arachidonic acid and the non-physiological gap junction uncoupler alpha-glycyrrhetinic acid (AGA). None of these agents increased glucose uptake by C6
glioma
cells, a cell line in which gap junction proteins are poorly expressed. In confluent astrocytes, the inhibition of gap junction permeability caused by AGA doubled the activity of the
pentose
phosphate shunt with minimal changes in the activity of the pyruvate dehydrogenase-catalyzed reaction and that of the tricarboxylic acid cycle. By contrast, these effects were not observed in dissociated astrocytes in which intercellular communication is lacking. The scraped loading dye transfer technique was modified to follow the passage of glucose and its metabolites through astrocyte gap junctions. The diffusion of glucose, the phosphorylated derivative glucose-6-phosphate, the phosphorylisable but not metabolisable derivative ortho-methyl-glucose, and the anaerobic glycolytic product L-lactate was much higher in astrocytes than in C6
glioma
cells and was inhibited by the inhibition of gap junction permeability caused by endothelin-1, arachidonic acid, octanol, or AGA. It is concluded that gap junction permeability may regulate brain metabolism by controlling the uptake, utilization, and intercellular distribution of glucose and its metabolites in astrocytes.
...
PMID:Endothelin-1 regulates glucose utilization in cultured astrocytes by controlling intercellular communication through gap junctions. 883 89
Brain tissue cells have been shown to use two predominant pathways for energy production. The first of these is the
pentose
phosphate shunt, and the second is glycolysis, followed by the TCA cycle. Inhibition of these pathways can result in a reduction of ATP, and changes in the concentration of various metabolites. In the present study, the acute and chronic effect of 6-aminonicotinamide (6-AN) (0.01, 0.02, and 0.03 mg/ml) was examined on astrocytes and C6-
glioma
cells. Following this treatment, glucose, lactate, glutamate, ATP, and PCr were assayed according to the procedures of Lowry and Passonneau. Our data indicated that following 15 minutes treatment of astrocytes and C6-
glioma
with 6AN there was no significant difference in the concentration of metabolites measured. However, following 24 hours treatment there was a significant increase in glucose concentration and significant reduction in the concentration of ATP, PCr, lactate and glutamate in both cell types. Morphological changes appeared later following 48 hours treatment with 6-AN in both cell types. Glucose accumulation can be explained by the fact that it is the precursor to both glycolysis and the
pentose
phosphate shunt. If these processes are inhibited, glucose will obviously accumulate and products like ATP, PCr, lactate and glutamate will decrease. Additionally, there was significant differences in concentration of glucose and lactate between astrocytes and C6-
glioma
cells. The significance of these differences has been discussed.
...
PMID:Effect of 6-aminonicotinamide on metabolism of astrocytes and C6-glioma cells. 910 36
Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) is a reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated in the stereoselective deamination of D-amino acids catalyzed by D-amino acid oxidase (DAAO). H2O2 readily crosses cellular membranes and damages DNA, proteins, and lipids. The scarcity of DAAO substrates in mammalian organisms and its co-localization with catalase in the peroxisomal matrix suggested that the cytotoxicity of ROS could be harnessed by administration of D-amino acids to tumor cells ectopically expressing DAAO in the cytoplasm. To evaluate this hypothesis, the cDNA encoding the highly active DAAO from the red yeast Rhodotorula gracilis was mutated to remove the carboxy-terminal peroxisomal targeting sequence. A clonal line of 9L
glioma
cells stably transfected with this construct (9Ldaao17) was found to synthesize active R. gracilis DAAO. Exposure of 9Ldaao17 cells to D-alanine resulted in cytotoxicity at concentrations that were nontoxic to parental 9L cells. Depletion of cellular glutathione further sensitized 9Ldaao17 cells to D-alanine (D-Ala). This result, combined with stimulation of
pentose
phosphate pathway activity and the production of extracellular H2O2 by 9Ldaao17 cells incubated with D-alanine implicates oxidative stress as the mediator of cytotoxicity. These results demonstrate that expression of R. gracilis DAAO in tumor cells confers chemosensitivity to D-alanine that could be exploited as a novel cancer gene therapy paradigm.
...
PMID:Induction of cytotoxic oxidative stress by D-alanine in brain tumor cells expressing Rhodotorula gracilis D-amino acid oxidase: a cancer gene therapy strategy. 947 75
The purpose of this study was to determine the mechanism by which adenosine, inosine, and guanosine delay cell death in glial cells (ROC-1) that are subjected to glucose deprivation and mitochondrial respiratory chain inhibition with amobarbital (GDMI). ROC-1 cells are hybrid cells formed by fusion of a rat oligodendrocyte and a rat C6
glioma
cell. Under GDMI, ATP was depleted rapidly from ROC-1 cells, followed on a much larger time scale by a loss of cell viability. Restoration of ATP synthesis during this interlude between ATP depletion and cell death prevented further loss of viability. Moreover, the addition of adenosine, inosine, or guanosine immediately before the amobarbital retarded the decline in ATP and preserved cell viability. The protective effects on ATP and viability were dependent on nucleoside concentration between 50 and 1,500 microM. Furthermore, protection required nucleoside transport into the cell and the continued presence of nucleoside during GDMI. A significant positive correlation between ATP content at 16 min and cell viability at 350 min after the onset of GDMI was established (r = 0.98). Modest increases in cellular lactate levels were observed during GDMI (1.2 nmol/mg/min lactate produced); however, incubation with 1,500 microM inosine or guanosine increased lactate accumulation sixfold. The protective effects of inosine and guanosine on cell viability and ATP were >90% blocked after treatment with 50 microM BCX-34, a nucleoside phosphorylase inhibitor. Accordingly, lactate levels also were lower in BCX-34-treated cells incubated with inosine or guanosine. We conclude that under GDMI, the ribose moiety of inosine and guanosine is converted to phosphorylated glycolytic intermediates via the
pentose
phosphate pathway, and its subsequent catabolism in glycolysis provides the ATP necessary for maintaining plasmalemmal integrity.
...
PMID:Adenosine, inosine, and guanosine protect glial cells during glucose deprivation and mitochondrial inhibition: correlation between protection and ATP preservation. 968 43
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