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[CANCER RESEARCH 44, 154-160, January 1984] Growth-related Enzymatic Control of Glycogen Metabolism in Cultured Human Tumor Cells1 Monique Roussel,2 HervéParis, Guillemette Chevalier, Blandine Terrain, Jean-Claude Murat, and Alain Zweibaum Unitéde Recherches sur le Métabolismeet la Différenciation de Cellules en Culture, INSERM U178, Hôpital Broussais, 96 rue Didot, 75674 Paris Cedex 14 ¡M.ft, G. C A. Z.], and UniversitéPaul Sabatier, Institut de Physiologie, 2 rue FrançoisMagendie, F-31400 Toulouse [H. P., B. T., J-C. M.], France ABSTRACT The activities of glycogen synthase and phosphorylase were measured and compared to the growth-related variations of glycogen accumulation in three cultured human tumor cell lines: HT-29 (colon carcinoma); MeWo (malignant melanoma); and RT4 (carcinoma of the urinary bladder). A similar pattern of varia tions in the enzyme activities was found in the three cell lines. The activities of the a + b forms of glycogen phosphorylase increased throughout the culture period. Maximal activity of phosphorylase a coincided with low intracellular concentrations of glycogen during the period of exponential growth. When the rate of cell division decreased, phosphorylase a activity also decreased while the glycogen levels increased. Glycogen syn thase was almost entirely in b form during the entire culture period, i.e., in both the exponential and the stationary phases. In vitro incubation of the cellular extracts without NaF showed, however, that the enzyme could be partially converted to the a form by the endogenous phosphatases. The Ao.5values of the enzyme for glucose-6-phosphate (Glc-6-P) were of the same order of magnitude as the intracellular Glc-6-P concentrations which ranged from 2.2 to 5.4 mw (almost 10 times those reported in normal cells). Similar Glc-6-P values were obtained by two different extraction methods controlled by the intracellular ATP and ADP concentrations. The Km values for uridine-5'-diphosphoglucose were always 2 to 3 times lower than the intracellular uridine-5'-diphosphoglucose concentrations. These results sug gest that: (a) in these tumor cells, glycogen is essentially synthe sized by glycogen synthase b via an allosteric activation by intracellular Glc-6-P; (b) there is no obvious growth-related con trol of glycogen synthase activity; and (c) the activity of glycogen phosphorylase seems to be growth dependent with maximal phosphorylase a activities associated with the period of high division rate. INTRODUCTION Over the last decades, a good deal of attention has been focused on the modifications in carbohydrate metabolism which are associated with the neoplastic process. These include: a higher rate of aerobic glycolysis (14, 30, 31, 48, 50) and the resurgence of fetal-type isoenzymes (41, 45, 49), as well as an increase in the rate of glucose transport and its consumption (14, 15, 51). Neoplasia is also known to be accompanied by changes in glycogen metabolism when the tumors arise from tissues which normally store glycogen, e.g., hepatomas (21, 22, 25, 40, 49, 50), choriocarcinomas (12), or the cervix carcinoma cell line HeLa (1,11). Much less is known about glycogen metabolism in tumors originating from epithelial tissues which normally do not store much glycogen (colon, kidney, lung, etc.). We were able to show that high amounts of glycogen were stored in colon tumors as compared to the normal tissue (38). Follow-up studies on more than 60 cultured human tumor cell lines originating from different tissues which normally do not store glycogen confirmed that their glycogen content was always much higher than in the corresponding normal tissue (35, 39). Moreover, a 3- to 4-fold increase of the glycogen concentration was observed after mi tosis during the Gìphase of synchronous cultures (35). In asynchronous cultures, the glycogen concentration remained at a constant level during the exponential phase of growth and then increased 3- to 10-fold when the rate of cell division declined and during the stationary phase (35, 39, 43). The glycogen concentrations attained in this way can be considerable. In some cell lines, they exceed 1 mg per mg of protein (39), a concentra tion which is even higher than the maximal values observed in the normal liver. The glycogen level of these cancer cells appears to be an intrinsic characteristic of each individual cancer: values during the exponential phase of growth of the cultured cells were similar to those in the corresponding tumors developed in nude mice (36). These data suggest that the neoplastic process leads to major modifications in the glycogen metabolism of these cells and, furthermore, that these changes are involved in the process of their growth. Any further understanding into why glycogen me tabolism should be involved in both the neoplastic transformation and the growth of such malignant cells implies a better knowl edge of how this metabolism is regulated in these cells. There fore, the purpose of the present work was to investigate the activity of the key enzymes implicated in this regulation, namely, glycogen synthase (EC 2.4.1.11) and glycogen phosphorylase (EC 2.4.1.1), in order to answer 2 questions: (a) how are the activities of these enzymes related to the variations of glycogen concentration observed during the growth of these cells? and (b) how can the activity of these enzymes account for the unusual glycogen concentrations found in these cells? Since the glycogen content varies from one cell line to another (39), 3 different cell lines of different glycogen levels were selected for this study. MATERIALS AND METHODS Materials 1Supported by INSERM CRL 79-5-486-7, CRL 79-1-476-7, 106. 2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed. Received December 27, 1982; accepted October 4,1983. 154 and ATP 74-79- The following compounds were obtained from the indicated sources: UDP-[14C]glucose (uniformly labeled in the glucose moiety) and [14C] glucose 1-phosphate, from New England Nuclear (Boston, Mass.); GlcCANCER RESEARCH Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on August 3, 2017. © 1984 American Association for Cancer Research. VOL. 44 Glycogen Metabolism in Tumor Cells 6-P3 dehydrogenase, NADP, NAD, UDP-GIc dehydrogenase, Kit 139.084 for lactic acid determination, phosphoenol pyruvate, pyruvate kinase, and ATP bioluminescence CLS Kit 567.736, from Boehringer Mannheim (Mannheim, Germany); and UDP-GIc, Glc-6-P, glucose-1-phosphate, 5'AMP, rabbit liver glycogen, and other chemicals, from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, Mo.). Fetal bovine serum and Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium were obtained from Grand Island Biological Co. (New York, N. Y.), and the plastic flasks were from Coming Glass Works (Coming, N. Y.). tained in a 200-^1 volume: 40 mw Pipes buffer (1,4-piperazine-diethane sulfonic acid), pH 6.8; 65 mM NaF; 1% rabbit liver glycogen; and 100 mM [14C]glucose 1-phosphate (0.02 /iCi/nmol), with or without 1 ITIMcaffeine, and with or without 1.5 mM AMP, added to 100 n\ of the cell homogenate supernatants containing 3 mg of protein per ml. The experimental pro cedure was the same as described for glycogen synthase. Glycogen synthase and phosphorylase activities are expressed as nmol of glucose incorporated into glycogen per min per mg of protein. The kinetic parameters of glycogen synthase were determined at 37°.The ratio of independence is defined as: Cell Cultures Activity without Glc-6-P The cultured cells used were of established lines derived from human tumors and were obtained from Dr. JörgenFogh (Sloan Kettering Institute for Cancer Research, Rye, N. Y.). They included the cell lines: HT-29 (colon carcinoma) (6-8); RT-4 (carcinoma of the urinary bladder) (6, 8, 27, 34); and MeWo (malignant melanoma) (2, 6, 8). The cells were cultured at 37° in 25-sq cm plastic flasks with Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (25 mM glucose) supplemented with 15% fetal bovine Activity with 10 mw Glc-6-P x 100 Extraction of Cell Intermediates: A Comparison of 2 Different Meth ods Method 1. The cells were harvested with 0.25% trypsin in 0.6 mM EDTA. Trypsin was neutralized with fresh serum-supplemented medium at 4°and the cells were centrifugea as described previously (35, 39). serum in an atmosphere of 90% air and 10% CO2. All cultures were mycoplasma free. The glucose consumption was determined at regular time intervals after medium changes by the glucose oxidase technique using a BGA2 Beckman glucose analyzer (Beckman Instruments, Gagny, France). The lactic acid production was determined according to the enzymatic method of Noll (26). The cell pellet was rinsed with ice-cold 0.9% NaCI solution and centrifuged. The cell pellet was then stored at -70°. The method was tested Glycogen and Protein Assays then immediately frozen by flotation of the flasks on liquid nitrogen and stored at -70°. The cells were harvested centrifugea for glycogen and 39). Glycogen was measured (46), and the protein content al. (23). For the assays, the frozen cell layer (Method 2) was scraped, or the frozen cell pellet (Method 1) was homogenized in 2 ml of ice-cold 0.5 N HCICv The mixture was sonicated for 10 sec, kept at 0°for 5 min, and centrifugea (2°at 4000 x g for 5 min). The supernatant was neutralized with 5 N KOH and centrifuged (2°at 4000 x g for 5 min). The assays with 0.25% trypsin in 0.6 mw EDTA, and protein assays as described previously (35, with anthrone by the method of Van Handel was measured by the method of Lowry et in comparison with the more classical Method 2 because it is more useful during the early stages of the culture when there is not much material. Method 2. The culture medium was removed from the flasks, and the cell layers were rapidly rinsed with ice-cold 0.9% NaCI solution and were were performed on the neutralized supernatants. Enzyme Preparation Freezing and Storage of Organs The medium was removed from the flasks, and the cell layers were rapidly rinsed with ice-cold 0.9% NaCI solution and then immediately frozen by flotation of the flasks on liquid nitrogen; storage was at -70°. For the assays, the cell layers were thawed in ice-cold homogenization buffer in a volume adjusted to give approximately 3 mg of cell protein per ml. The homogenization buffer contained: 62.5 rriM glycylglycine buffer, pH 7.4; 6.25 rriM EDTA; 125 mw NaF; 0.5 M saccharose; and 5 HIM dithiothreitol. The cells were scraped into the buffer and then disrupted at 0°,by 20 passages through a 26-gauge needle fitted to a 1-ml polypropylene syringe within a 30-sec time lapse. The homogenates were centrifugea (15 min at 4°;2500 x g), and the supernatants were used for the enzyme assays. Enzyme Assays Glycogen synthase activity was determined by following the incorpo ration of glucose from UDP-[14C]glucose into glycogen according to the method of Thomas ef a/. (44). The standard assay mixture contained in a 200 n\ volume: 40 mw Tris-HCI buffer, pH 7.8; 4 mw EDTA; 8 rriM NaF; 1% rabbit liver glycogen; and 10 mw UDP-[14C]glucose (0.02 ^Ci/mol), with or without 10 ITIMGlc-6-P, added to 100 n\ of the cell homogenate supernatants containing 3 mg of protein per ml. After incubation at 25°, a 50-¿tlaliquot was spotted onto a filter paper, frozen in a liquid nitrogen atmosphere, and rinsed in a 66% ethanol bath at 4°to remove free Four normal mice were killed by cervical dislocation between 10 and 11 a.m. Liver and muscle were excised immediately after death, divided into small fragments, and frozen immediately in liquid N2 (<1 min after death). They served as references for Glc-6-P and UDP-GIc concentra tions. For the assays, homogenization as described above. and neutralization were performed Measurements of Cell Intermediates ATP and ADP. Aliquots of the neutralized supernatants obtained from the 2 extraction methods described above were immediately diluted 10fold in a 0.1 M Tris, 2 mM EDTA buffer, pH 7.75. ATP and ADP measurements were performed according to the method of Spielman ef a/. (42), using the ATP bioluminescence CLS kit and a LKB 1251 luminometer (LKB Instruments, Orsay, France). For ADP determination, phosphoenol pyruvate and pyruvate kinase were added as described by Spielman ef al. (42). Glc-6-P Concentration. Glc-6-P concentration was measured with an adaptation of the method of Lang and Michal (19). Fifty n\ of the neutralized supernatants of cancer cell extracts or normal liver and muscle were added to 600 ¿dof incubation mixture containing 0.2 M triethanolamine, pH 7.6; 10 mw MgCfe; 0.8 mM NADP; and Glc-6-P labeled UDP-GIc molecules. The ethanol bath was renewed 3 times and, dehydrogenase (commercial solution), 4.5 units/ml. The reaction pro ceeded over a 15-min period at 25°,after which the reduced NADP was after 6 to 10 hr, the filter papers were dried and counted. Glycogen phosphorylase activity was determined according to the method of Wang and Esmann (47) by following the incorporation of glucose from [14C] measured in a fluorometer with a 360-nm filter for excitation and a Vitatron U-11 secondary filter. Taking into account that the cancer cells studied here possess a very active endogenous Glc-6-P dehydrogenase,4 glucose 1-phosphate each cell extraction was paralleled with another one in which 10 mM Glc6-P were added during the homogenization in HCIO4. Recovery of all of the added Glc-6-P ensured that the Glc-6-P dehydrogenase was de- 3 The abbreviations 5'-diphosphoglucose. JANUARY into glycogen. The standard assay mixture con- used are: Glc-6-P, glucose 6-phosphate; UDP-GIc, undine * M. Rousset, unpublisheddata. 1984 Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on August 3, 2017. © 1984 American Association for Cancer Research. 155 M. Rousset et al. stroyed during the extraction and that the observed values for Gte-6-P were accurate. UDP-Gic Concentration. UDP-Gic concentration was measured with an adaptation of the method of Keppler and Decker (16) in the same neutralized supernatants used for Glc-6-P determinations. One hundred u\ of supernatant were added to 600 pi of incubation medium containing 0.4 M glycine buffer, pH 8.7; 3 mM NAD; and UDP-Gic dehydrogenase (commercial solution), 30 munits/ml. After a 20-min incubation at 25°, the reduced NAD was measured in the same way as already described for Gte-6-P. The intracellular concentrations of the metabolites (Gte-6-P and UDPGte) took into account the intracellular water content which was appre ciated by the technique of Reitzer et al. (33). The values (/il/mg of cell protein) found were: 4.8 ±0.3 (S.D.) for HT-29; 6.9 ±0.8 for RT-4; and 6.8 ±0.8 for MeWo. They were constant during the entire culture period for all the cell lines. phase varies from one cell line to another (2-fold for HT-29, 9fold for MeWo, and 3-fold for RT-4). The glycogen concentrations found in the exponential and stationary phase do not depend on the glucose consumption and lactic acid production (Table 1). For instance, HT-29 and MeWo cell lines, which have similar high glucose consumption rates and lactic acid production, exhibit different glycogen levels in the exponential phase and even more pronounced differences in the stationary phase. A small decrease is observed in the glucose consumption rates in the transition from the exponential to the stationary phase in all 3 cell lines. The ratio between lactic acid production and glucose consumption remains constant, however, during the entire culture period. The reason why the lactic acid production in HT-29, MeWo, and RT-4 cell lines should be slightly higher than the values calculated from their glucose consumption may be due to the fact that not all of their lactic RESULTS Cell Growth and Glycogen Levels. The growth-related changes in the glycogen concentration of the 3 cancer cell lines are reported in Chart 1a. The glycogen concentration is always lower and stable during the first, as opposed to the last, days in culture. This concentration, which is specific for each cell line (39), begins to increase as soon as confluence is reached (on Day 5 for MeWo, and on Day 8 for HT-29 and RT-4 cell lines) and then regularly increases as the rate of cell division decreases as well as during the stationary phase. It must be noted that: (a) even in HT-29, which is the cell line in the present series with the lowest glycogen concentration, this concentration is at least 10 times higher than in the normal tissue (38); (b) the increase in the glycogen concentration from the exponential to the stationary HT-29 Tabte! Glucose consumption and lactic acid production during the exponentialand stationary phases of growth in culture of the cell lines HT-29, MeWo,and RT-4 protein)Ce« lineHT-20 Glucose consumption Gimol/hr/mg phase*0.60 acid production protein)Exponential (/imol/hr/mg phase"0.46 phase1.20 phase1.05 ±0.10° ±0.08 ±0.20 ±0.10 MeWo 0.73 ±0.15 0.60 ±0.10 1.50 ±0.20 1.30 ±0.15 RT-4Exponential 0.40 ±0.05Stationary 0.30 ±0.05Lactic 0.90 ±0.10Stationary 0.70 ±0.10 " Results are from the fifth day of growth, Three flasks were used for each determination. " Results are from the 18th day of growth, Three flasks were used for each determination. c Mean ±S.D. RT-4 MeWo .SO 4. .500 O I Z •o _ x O 200. 100. .X LSO 25. a. • o Z •o £ o. O S s- -I .50 25- -50 10- O «Vj. f\ rt_ io IB DAYS Chart 1. Glycogen content and activities of glycogen phosphoryiase and synthase during the growth in culture of the tumor cell lines HT-29, MeWo, and RT-4. Measurements were performed on Days 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 9, 12, 15, and 18, at 18 hr after the medium changes, a, protein content (mg) per flask (A) and glycogen concentrations (•) (»jg/mg protein), b, glycogen phosphoryiase activities are reported without (D) or with (•) 1 mM AMP. The activity is expressed as nmol of product formed per min per mg of protein after 10 min of incubation at 25°(left). The activity ratio is defined as the activity without AMP/activity with 10 mw AMP, the results being multiplied by 100 (O, right), c, glycogen synthase activities are reported without (V) or with (T) 6 mmGlc-6-P.The activity is expressed as nmol of product formed per min per mg of protein after 30 min of incubation at 25°(left). The activity ratio is defined as the activity without Glc-6-P/activity with 10 mMGlc-6-P, the result being multiplied by 100 (O. right). Values,average of 3 different cultures. 156 CANCER RESEARCH Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on August 3, 2017. © 1984 American Association for Cancer Research. VOL. 44 Glycogen Metabolism in Tumor Cells Tables Intracellular ATP and ADP concentrations and ADP/ATP ratios in each cell line using 2 different extraction methods proteinATPHT-29 nmol/mg of (%)Method 1a24.0±1.4Õ>'C 15.0 25.3 121 ±0.8C ±0.3 ±0.3 MeWoRT-4Method 17.0 ±0.9 31.0 ±3.1 3.1 ±0.1 4.4 ±0.1 1616TP 30.5 ±0.2Methods829.7 43.0 ±0.5ADPMethod 5.0 ±0.1Method 7.5 ±0.2ADP/AMethod 218 15 17 See "Materials and Methods.' 6 Mean ±S.D. c Each value represents the average of 2 flasks. Assays were conducted in duplicate. Cells were harvested on the fifth day of growth. acid is derived from glucose. A similar observation has been described in other cell lines (33). Glycogen Phosphorylase Activities. The results of glycogen phosphorylase activities are presented in Chart 10. The total phosphorylase activity (a + b) was assayed in the presence of 1 HIM AMP, which is a concentration ensuring maximal activation. Indeed, throughout the culture period, the respective Ao.5AMP values are 0.06 M for MeWo, 0.125 HIM for HT-29, and 0.2 ITIM for RT-4 cell lines. A similar pattern of the total enzyme activity (a + b) is observed in the 3 cell lines, namely, a regular increase of the a + b activity during the time course of culture. The observed total activities are different from one cell line to another and are not directly correlated to the specific glycogen level of each cell line. In the 3 cell lines, the phosphorylase a activity exhibits a transitory increase during the first days of culture, when the cells are highly dividing and the glycogen levels are at their minimum. Analysis of the activity ratio, which reflects the phosphorylation state of the enzyme, shows that maximal phosphorylation always occurs during the period of high division rate in all the cell lines. A progressive decrease in the phosphorylation state is observed when the rate of cell division declines at confluency and during the stationary phase (Chart 1b). The assays were all performed without or with 1 HIM caffeine in the assay system; the results obtained were the same. Glycogen Synthese Activities during Cell Growth. As shown in Chart 1c, the glycogen synthase activity assayed in the presence of 6 mM Glc-6-P, i.e., the a + b forms of the enzyme, regularly increases during the culture period, reaching a plateau between Days 12 and 18. The specific activity of glycogen synthase a + o varies from one cell line to another and, as in the case of the glycogen phosphorylase, levels were not related to glycogen contents. None of the 3 cell lines has more than trace amounts of the glycogen synthase a form at any stage of the culture period, not even when glycogen accumulates. Cellular ATP and ADP Levels. The cellular ATP and ADP levels were compared for each cell line using 2 different extrac tion methods. The results are reported in Table 2. Although the recovery was sometimes higher using Method 2, the ADP and ATP levels and, more particulariy, the ADP/ATP ratios obtained by both methods were very similar. The values reported here are similar to those already reported by other authors (32, 33). Kinetic Constants for Glc-6-P of Glycogen Synthase b. Glycogen synthesis can be due to the allosteric activation of glycogen synthase b by Glc-6-P (20). For this reason, the intracellular Glc-6-P concentration as well as the activation constant of the enzyme were determined at different stages of culture in the 3 cell lines. The Ao.5Glc-6-P values on Days 5,9,12,15, and JANUARY Table 3 AO5 Glc-6-P values and corresponding intracellular Glc-6-P concentrations during the growth in culture of the cell lines HT-29, MeWo, and RT-4 Glc-6-PCell 1*1.812.5 (HIM) Method lineHT-29MeWoRT-4Day591215185912151859121518Ao5a 2o5.0 1.2e3.34.51.60.81.2 5.4 ± 0.8e2.2 ± ±0.51.22.511.31.5 2.8 0.72.3 ± ±0.31.52.5Method 2.7 ±0.6 AOSGlc-6-P values were obtained from the corresponding Lineweaver-Burk plots. See 'Materials and Methods." 0 Mean ±S.D. of the Glc-6-P concentrations obtained on Days 5,9,12,15, and 18. For each day, 2 different flasks were used, and the assays were conducted in triplicate. These Glc-6-P concentrations were determined on the same cultures which were used for the determination of the A« Glc-6-P values. 18 of each cell line were calculated from the corresponding Lineweaver-Burk plots. An increase of the Ao5Glc-6-P values is observed during the culture period: a similar pattern is found in all 3 cell lines (Table 3). Table 3 also records the corresponding intracellular Glc-6-P concentrations obtained by both extraction methods. No clear-cut change in Glc-6-P levels was found during the culture period. The Glc-6-P concentrations range from 2.2 to 5.4 HIM and were similar for each cell line in the 2 types of extracts. They are 6- to 10-fold higher than those obtained in normal liver and muscle assayed under the same conditions. These values are, respectively, 0.34 ±0.05 mM for the liver and 0.66 ±0.07 ITIMfor the muscle, and are very similar to those already reported in normal liver and muscle by other authors (52). The Glc-6-P concentrations in the cancer cell lines are of the same order of magnitude as the calculated A0;,Glc-6-P values for each cell line. Kinetic Constants for UDP-GIc of Glycogen Synthase b. The Km values were measured in the presence of 6 PIM Glc-6-P as permanent allosteric activator. They were calculated on Days 5, 9, 12, 15, and 18 of the cell cultures from the corresponding Lineweaver-Burk plots. As summarized in Table 4, the Kmvalues always increase gradually over the time course of the culture. Table 4 gives the corresponding intracellular concentrations of 1984 Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on August 3, 2017. © 1984 American Association for Cancer Research. 157 M. Roussel et al. UDP-GIc. Similar values were obtained for each Å“il line in the 2 types of extracts. These values are fairly constant during the culture and are found to be at least twice as high as the corresponding Km values. In the case of the HT-29 and MeWo cell lines, a curvilinearity of the Lineweaver-Burk plots was observed on Days 15 and 18 (Chart 2). The UDP-GIc concentra tions in these cancer cell lines are at least 10-fold higher than those in normal liver or muscle assayed in the present report. The values obtained are 0.32 ±0.03 ÕTIM for the liver and 0.06 ±0.02 rnw for the muscle, these levels being very similar to those already reported by other authors (52). Test of Conversion of Glycogen Synthase b to a Form. Glycogen synthase in crude extracts of the 3 cultured cell lines is predominantly in the Glc-6-P-dependent form (b form) through out the culture period. In order to check whether such a situation was due to an impairment of the dephosphorylating mechanism of the enzyme in the same way as has been reported for other models (13), the crude extracts were incubated without NaF. The results reported in Chart 3 show that this incubation resulted in a rapid partial conversion of synthase b to synthase a (within 15 min), with the total activity of a + b forms remaining constant. The ratio of independence was increased in the 3 cell lines, but the values reached in the cell extracts from the last stages of Tabte4 K„ valuesfor UPD-GIcand corresponding intracellular UDP-GIcconcentrations during the growth in culture of the cell lines HT-29, MeWo, and RT-4 HT-29 UDP-GIc MeWo Method 2* Method! HT-29MeWoRT-45912151859121518591215180.460.550.55 Cell line Day K,,,'1(mu) 0.8C0.550.590.30.350.42 4.3 ± 0.72.5 ± 75 min RT-4 0.50.50.50.50.770.77 2.3 ± 0.83.3 ± 0.31.051.354.0 2.9 ± ±0.6 " Kmvalues were obtained from the corresponding Lineweaver-Burkplots. See "Materials and Methods." 0 Mean ±S.D. of the UDP-GIcconcentrations obtained on Days 5, 9, 12, 15, and 18. For each day, 2 different flasks were used, and the assays were conducted in triplicate. These UDP-GIcconcentrations were determined on the same samples used for the determinations of the Gfc-6-Pconcentrations. Chart 3. Conversion of glycogen synthase b to synthase a. Extracts of cells from Days 5 (•) and 18 (•) were incubated at 37°without NaF to see if a dephosphorylationof glycogen synthase could occur. At the indicated times (0,15, 45, and 75 min), 8 mm NaF was added, and glycogen synthase activity was assayed. This activity was determined with or without 10 mMGfc-6-Pas described before. The ratio of independence(see "Materials and Methods") is reported each time. Cu/ves, from one experiment. >V-\fe Vv-Vo HT-29 0.2. Chart 2. Effect of UDP-GIcon the activity of glycogen synthase b. Enzyme was assayed with 6 HIMGte-6-P and various UDP-GIccon centrations on Days 5 (•), 9 (A), 12 (O), 15 (D), and 18 (•) at 37°.Curves, from 2 separate cultures. 0.1. V [UDP-GIc] 158 (mM-1) CANCER RESEARCH Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on August 3, 2017. © 1984 American Association for Cancer Research. VOL. 44 Glycogen Metabolism in Tumor Cells the cultures were always lower than those in the Å“il extracts from earlier growth phases. reflect a heterogeneity of the enzyme extracts at these stages of the culture. However, both the values of Ao 5Glc-6-P and those of Kmfor UDP-Glc are compatible with the synthesis of glycogen DISCUSSION via the phosphorylated forms of the enzyme during the whole culture period in the 3 cancer cell lines studied. As the ratio between glucose consumption and lactic acid production is constant in each cell line during the entire culture period and, furthermore, the Glc-6-P and UDP-Glc concentrations The unusual accumulation of glycogen in human cultured cancer cells and its growth-related variations prompted this investigation on the way glycogen metabolism is regulated in these cells. In mammalian tissues, this is known to be essentially mediated through the covalent modifications of glycogen synthase and phosphorylase by phosphorylation and dephosphorylation via an integrated control (3, 5,10,17, 20). The results presented here show that both of the enzymes, glycogen synthase and phosphorylase, are present in the 3 cancer cells studied. The pattern of these enzyme activities as a function of the pattern of glycogen accumulation during cell growth suggests, however, that the mechanism(s) of control of glycogen synthesis in these cancer cells is different from the one(s) attributed to normal cells. One divergence stems from the fact that the glycogen synthase is almost completely in a phosphorylated, Glc-6-P-dependent form throughout the entire cul ture period. Even the considerable increase of glycogen accu mulation in the last stages of the culture of the MeWo cell line is not correlated with any conversion of glycogen synthase to the active form. Such a situation is not due to an impairment of the dephosphorylating mechanism of the enzyme, since it is possible to obtain a conversion to the dephosphorylated form in cellular extracts incubated without NaF. Since the structure of glycogen is normal in these cancer cell lines,4 it can be assumed that glycogen synthesis proceeds normally via the branching enzyme and glycogen synthase. Consequently, glycogen synthesis in these cells may only be achieved by a phosphorylated, Glc-6-Pdependent form of glycogen synthase. It is generally agreed that this form of the enzyme is inactive under normal physiological conditions (29). However, the 3 tumor cell lines studied all contained Glc-6-P concentrations high enough to result in an allosteric activation of the phosphorylated forms of the glycogen synthase which is present throughout the culture period. Such high Glc-6-P concentrations were obtained by 2 different extrac tion methods and cannot be due to an artifact of the preparations as controlled by ATP and ADP concentrations in the same extracts. The 3 tumor cell lines studied contained much higher concentrations of intracellular Glc-6-P at all stages of the culture than those usually reported in normal cells (9,12) or those found in normal liver and muscle either in the present study or by other authors (52). The reason why such high Glc-6-P concentrations should be present in these human cancer cells still needs to be investigated. Such increase in Glc-6-P concentrations has al ready been reported in rat tumor cells or transformed cells as compared to normal cells (4). One possible explanation is that cancer cells contain a hexokinase which is not appreciably inhibited by Glc-6-P (28). The total glycogen synthase activity increased as the time in culture was extended. This enhancement was found in all 3 cell lines and was always accompanied by an increase in the Ao 5Glc-6-P values and a decrease in affinity for UDP-Glc. Further studies will be needed to investigate whether new forms of phosphorylated glycogen synthase appear at the transition from the exponential to the stationary phase of growth. There is some evidence to suggest that this may be the case: a curvilinearity of the Lineweaver-Burk plots is observed on Days 15 and 18 in the HT-29 and MeWo cell lines, which may well JANUARY 1984 are likewise constant, it is most unlikely that the variations of glycogen accumulation, which are related to the different growth phases, can be explained by clear-cut modifications in glycogen synthesis. These changes can be more satisfactorily attributed to the differences in the phosphorylation state of glycogen phos phorylase. Indeed, the phosphorylation state of this enzyme was found to vary significantly with the growth-related pattern of glycogen accumulation. Thus, maximal activations of glycogen phosphorylase were always associated with the lowest glycogen levels during the periods of cell division, whereas a progressive inactivation of this enzyme regularly occurred when the rate of cell division declined and glycogen levels increased. Further studies on glycogen turnover should establish whether glycogen synthesis remains constant during the whole culture period. If so, one could envisage that the lower values found during the period of high division rate could result from the activation of glycogen phosphorylase, while the progressive accumulation of glycogen could result from a progressive inactivation of this enzyme when the cells stop dividing. This pattern of variations in the phosphorylation state of glycogen phosphorylase during cell growth, and especially the association of an activation of the enzyme with the period of cell division, would suggest that the phosphorylation of glycogen phosphorylase is related to the process of cell division. Further studies would need to investigate whether some effectors could be involved in the dual control of cell division as well as of the known enzymatic cascade leading to the activation of glycogen phosphorylase. It is already known that HT-29 cells have an adenylate cyclase-mediated control system of glycogenolysis (18, 24, 37). Taken together with previous results on glycogen accumula tion in human malignant epithelial cells (35, 38, 39), the present data strongly suggest that glycogen metabolism may play an important role in the physiology of cancer cell division. 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VOL. 44 Growth-related Enzymatic Control of Glycogen Metabolism in Cultured Human Tumor Cells Monique Rousset, Hervé Paris, Guillemette Chevalier, et al. Cancer Res 1984;44:154-160. Updated version E-mail alerts Reprints and Subscriptions Permissions Access the most recent version of this article at: http://cancerres.aacrjournals.org/content/44/1/154 Sign up to receive free email-alerts related to this article or journal. To order reprints of this article or to subscribe to the journal, contact the AACR Publications Department at [email protected]. To request permission to re-use all or part of this article, contact the AACR Publications Department at [email protected]. Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on August 3, 2017. © 1984 American Association for Cancer Research.