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  2. Determining the quantitative relationship between glycolysis and GAPDH in cancer cells exhibiting the Warburg effect

Determining the quantitative relationship between glycolysis and GAPDH in cancer cells exhibiting the Warburg effect

  • J Biol Chem. 2021 Jan-Jun;296:100369. doi: 10.1016/j.jbc.2021.100369.
Xiaobing Zhu 1 Chengmeng Jin 1 Qiangrong Pan 1 Xun Hu 2
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Cancer Institute (Key Laboratory for Cancer Intervention and Prevention, China National Ministry of Education, Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Medical Sciences), The Second Affiliated Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine, Hangzhou, China.
  • 2 Cancer Institute (Key Laboratory for Cancer Intervention and Prevention, China National Ministry of Education, Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Medical Sciences), The Second Affiliated Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine, Hangzhou, China. Electronic address: huxun@zju.edu.cn.
Abstract

Previous studies have identified GAPDH as a promising target for treating Cancer and modulating immunity because its inhibition reduces glycolysis in cells (Cancer cells and immune cells) with the Warburg effect, a modified form of cellular metabolism found in Cancer cells. However, the quantitative relationship between GAPDH and the aerobic glycolysis remains unknown. Here, using siRNA-mediated knockdown of GAPDH expression and iodoacetate-dependent inhibition of Enzyme activity, we examined the quantitative relationship between GAPDH activity and glycolysis rate. We found that glycolytic rates were unaffected by the reduction of GAPDH activity down to 19% ± 4.8% relative to untreated controls. However, further reduction of GAPDH activity below this level caused proportional reductions in the glycolysis rate. GAPDH knockdown or inhibition also simultaneously increased the concentration of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate (GA3P, the substrate of GAPDH). This increased GA3P concentration countered the effect of GAPDH knockdown or inhibition and stabilized the glycolysis rate by promoting GAPDH activity. Mechanistically, the intracellular GA3P concentration is controlled by the Gibbs free energy of the reactions upstream of GAPDH. The thermodynamic state of the reactions along the glycolysis pathway was only affected when GAPDH activity was reduced below 19% ± 4.8%. Doing so moved the reactions catalyzed by GAPDH + PGK1 (phosphoglycerate kinase 1, the Enzyme immediate downstream of GAPDH) away from the near-equilibrium state, revealing an important biochemical basis to interpret the rate control of glycolysis by GAPDH. Collectively, we resolved the numerical relationship between GAPDH and glycolysis in Cancer cells with the Warburg effect and interpreted the underlying mechanism.

Keywords

GAPDH; Gibbs free energy; Warburg effect; cancer cells; cell metabolism; flux control; glycolysis.

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