Spatial-fluxomics provides a subcellular-compartmentalized view of reductive glutamine metabolism in cancer cells.
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IF: 17.694
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Cited by: 47
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Abstract

The inability to inspect metabolic activities within subcellular compartments has been a major barrier to our understanding of eukaryotic cell metabolism. Here, we describe a spatial-fluxomics approach for inferring metabolic fluxes in mitochondria and cytosol under physiological conditions, combining isotope tracing, rapid subcellular fractionation, LC-MS-based metabolomics, computational deconvolution, and metabolic network modeling. Applied to study reductive glutamine metabolism in cancer cells, shown to mediate fatty acid biosynthesis under hypoxia and defective mitochondria, we find a previously unappreciated role of reductive IDH1 as the sole net contributor of carbons to fatty acid biosynthesis under standard normoxic conditions in HeLa cells. In murine cells with defective SDH, we find that reductive biosynthesis of citrate in mitochondria is followed by a reversed CS activity, suggesting a new route for supporting pyrimidine biosynthesis. We expect this spatial-fluxomics approach to be a highly useful tool for elucidating the role of metabolic dysfunction in human disease.

Keywords

Spatial Omics

MeSH terms

Animals
Carbon Isotopes
Cell Compartmentation
Cell Hypoxia
Citrate (si)-Synthase
Citric Acid
Citric Acid Cycle
Cytosol
Glutamine
HeLa Cells
Humans
Isocitrate Dehydrogenase
Metabolic Flux Analysis
Metabolome
Mice
Mitochondria
Neoplasms
Subcellular Fractions
Succinate Dehydrogenase

Authors

Lee, Won Dong
Mukha, Dzmitry
Aizenshtein, Elina
Shlomi, Tomer

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