Cytosolic acetyl-CoA synthetase affected tumor cell survival under hypoxia: The possible function in tumor acetyl-CoA/acetate metabolism

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Abstract

Understanding tumor-specific metabolism under hypoxia is important to find novel targets for antitumor drug design. Here we found that tumor cells expressed higher levels of cytosolic acetyl-CoA synthetase (ACSS2) under hypoxia than normoxia. Knockdown of ACSS2 by RNA interference (RNAi) in tumor cells enhanced tumor cell death under long-term hypoxia in vitro. Our data also demonstrated that the ACSS2 suppression slowed tumor growth in vivo. These findings showed that ACSS2 plays a significant role in tumor cell survival under hypoxia and that ACSS2 would be a potential target for tumor treatment. Furthermore, we found that tumor cells excreted acetate and the quantity increased under hypoxia: the pattern of acetate excretion followed the expression pattern of ACSS2. Additionally, the ACSS2 knockdown led to a corresponding reduction in the acetate excretion in tumor cells. These results mean that ACSS2 can conduct the reverse reaction from acetyl-CoA to acetate in tumor cells, which indicates that ACSS2 is a bi-directional enzyme in tumor cells and that ACSS2 might play a buffering role in tumor acetyl-CoA/acetate metabolism. © 2009 Japanese Cancer Association.

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APA

Yoshii, Y., Furukawa, T., Yoshii, H., Mori, T., Kiyono, Y., Waki, A., … Fujibayashi, Y. (2009). Cytosolic acetyl-CoA synthetase affected tumor cell survival under hypoxia: The possible function in tumor acetyl-CoA/acetate metabolism. Cancer Science, 100(5), 821–827. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1349-7006.2009.01099.x

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