ATP Supply from Cytosol to Mitochondria Is an Additional Role of Aerobic Glycolysis to Prevent Programmed Cell Death by... 2025 Matsuda et al

Andy

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Full title: ATP Supply from Cytosol to Mitochondria Is an Additional Role of Aerobic Glycolysis to Prevent Programmed Cell Death by Maintenance of Mitochondrial Membrane Potential

Abstract​

Eukaryotic cells generate ATP primarily via oxidative and substrate-level phosphorylation. Despite the superior efficiency of oxidative phosphorylation, eukaryotic cells often use both pathways as aerobic glycolysis, even in the presence of oxygen. However, its role in cell survival remains poorly understood.

Objectives: In this study, aerobic glycolysis was compared between the Warburg effect in breast cancer cells (MCF7) and the Crabtree effect in a laboratory strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae (S288C).

Methods: The metabolic adaptations of MCF7 and S288C cells were compared following treatment with electron transport chain inhibitors, including FCCP, antimycin A, and oligomycin.

Results: MCF7 and S288C cells exhibited strikingly similar metabolic rewiring toward substrate-level phosphorylation upon inhibitor treatment, suggesting that mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation and cytosolic substrate-level phosphorylation communicate through a common mechanism. Measurement of mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP) and ATP concentrations further indicated that cytosolic ATP was transported into the mitochondria under conditions of reduced electron transport chain activity. This ATP was likely utilized in the reverse mode of H+/ATPase to maintain MMP, which contributed to the avoidance of programmed cell death.

Conclusions: These results suggest that the ATP supply to mitochondria plays a conserved role in aerobic glycolysis in yeast and mammalian cancer cells. This mechanism likely contributes to cell survival under conditions of fluctuating oxygen availability.

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