articleThe Journal of Cell BiologyJul 2, 2007BRONZE OA

Deficiency in glutamine but not glucose induces MYC-dependent apoptosis in human cells

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory · San Francisco Foundation · +2 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

The idea that conversion of glucose to ATP is an attractive target for cancer therapy has been supported in part by the observation that glucose deprivation induces apoptosis in rodent cells transduced with the proto-oncogene MYC, but not in the parental line. Here, we found that depletion of glucose killed normal human cells irrespective of induced MYC activity and by a mechanism different from apoptosis. However, depletion of glutamine, another major nutrient consumed by cancer cells, induced apoptosis depending on MYC activity. This apoptosis was preceded by depletion of the Krebs cycle intermediates, was prevented by two Krebs cycle substrates, but was unrelated to ATP synthesis or several other reported…

No related works found for this paper.