hydroxycitrate effects on tumor cells

From: Doug Skrecky (oberon@vcn.bc.ca)
Date: Sun Aug 02 1998 - 05:57:37 MDT


Authors
  Board M. Newsholme E.
Institution
  Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford, U.K.
Title
  Hydroxycitrate causes
  altered pyruvate metabolism by tumorigenic cells.
Source
  Biochemistry & Molecular Biology International. 40(5):1047-56, 1996 Nov.
Abstract
  Metabolic fates of pyruvate (CO2, lactate, citrate) in normal and neoplastic
  cells have been assessed. Pyruvate consumption by tumour cells falls (by
  72-85%) and mean percentage oxidation rises from 75% to 91% with
  hydroxycitrate. Ratios of rates of oxidation of
  (3-(14)C-pyruvate) : (1-(14)C-pyruvate), indicating CO2 produced from TCA
  cycle activity : that from PDH activity, are higher for tumorigenic
  (0.17-0.24) than for non-tumorigenic (0.005-0.04) cells and increase
  (0.27-0.65 and 0.13-0.29, respectively) with hydroxycitrate.
  Although maximal ATP-citrate lyase activities do not correlate with
  malignancy, citrate may be a major fate of glutaminolytic pyruvate in tumour
  cells. Citrate accounts for 14-37% of consumed glutamine compared with 11-13%
  being recovered as CO2. By contrast, approximately 100% of glycolytic
  pyruvate is converted to lactate.



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