人脑
脑癌
胶质瘤
癌症
新陈代谢
神经递质
碳水化合物代谢
癌细胞
神经科学
生物
皮质(解剖学)
葡萄糖摄取
焊剂(冶金)
下调和上调
大脑皮层
生物化学
化学
内分泌学
癌症研究
中枢神经系统
基因
胰岛素
遗传学
有机化学
作者
Andrew J. Scott,Anjali Mittal,Baharan Meghdadi,Sravya Palavalasa,Abhinav Achreja,Alexandra O’Brien,Ayesha U. Kothari,Weihua Zhou,Jie Xu,Angelica Lin,Kari Wilder-Romans,Donna M. Edwards,Zhe Wu,Jiane Feng,Anthony Andren,Li Zhang,Vijay Tarnal,Kimberly Redic,Nathan Qi,J Fischer
标识
DOI:10.1101/2023.10.24.23297489
摘要
Abstract The brain avidly consumes glucose to fuel neurophysiology. Cancers of the brain, such as glioblastoma (GBM), lose aspects of normal biology and gain the ability to proliferate and invade healthy tissue. How brain cancers rewire glucose utilization to fuel these processes is poorly understood. Here we perform infusions of 13 C-labeled glucose into patients and mice with brain cancer to define the metabolic fates of glucose-derived carbon in tumor and cortex. By combining these measurements with quantitative metabolic flux analysis, we find that human cortex funnels glucose-derived carbons towards physiologic processes including TCA cycle oxidation and neurotransmitter synthesis. In contrast, brain cancers downregulate these physiologic processes, scavenge alternative carbon sources from the environment, and instead use glucose-derived carbons to produce molecules needed for proliferation and invasion. Targeting this metabolic rewiring in mice through dietary modulation selectively alters GBM metabolism and slows tumor growth. Significance This study is the first to directly measure biosynthetic flux in both glioma and cortical tissue in human brain cancer patients. Brain tumors rewire glucose carbon utilization away from oxidation and neurotransmitter production towards biosynthesis to fuel growth. Blocking these metabolic adaptations with dietary interventions slows brain cancer growth with minimal effects on cortical metabolism.
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