malonyl-coenzyme-a and Breast-Neoplasms

malonyl-coenzyme-a has been researched along with Breast-Neoplasms* in 5 studies

Other Studies

5 other study(ies) available for malonyl-coenzyme-a and Breast-Neoplasms

ArticleYear
Hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry analysis of malonyl-coenzyme A in breast cancer cell cultures applying online solid-phase extraction.
    Journal of separation science, 2017, Volume: 40, Issue:22

    Cofactors such as coenzyme A and its derivatives acetyl-coenzyme A and malonyl-coenzyme A are involved in many metabolic pathways. Due to trace level concentrations in biological samples and the high reactivity of cofactors, a fast, sensitive, and selective method for quantification is mandatory. In this study, online solid-phase extraction was coupled successfully to hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry for isolation of analytes in complex matrix and quantification by external calibration. Online solid-phase extraction was carried out by application of a weak anion-exchange column, whereas hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography separation was performed on an amide modified stationary phase. Sample preparation of the extracts before the analysis was reduced to a centrifugation and dilution step. Moreover, the applied online solid-phase extraction significantly reduced matrix effects and increased the signal-to-noise ratio. The limit of detection and the limit of quantification were in the lower nanomolar range. Finally, the applicability of this method was demonstrated on MCF-7 breast cancer cell cultures, a commonly used model system, where acetyl-coenzyme A and malonyl-coenzyme A were determined using standard addition procedure in concentrations of 1.98 μM and 41 nM, respectively.

    Topics: Breast Neoplasms; Chromatography, Liquid; Humans; Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions; Malonyl Coenzyme A; MCF-7 Cells; Solid Phase Extraction; Tandem Mass Spectrometry

2017
Inhibition of fatty acid synthase-dependent neoplastic lipogenesis as the mechanism of gamma-linolenic acid-induced toxicity to tumor cells: an extension to Nwankwo's hypothesis.
    Medical hypotheses, 2005, Volume: 64, Issue:2

    gamma-Linolenic acid (GLA), an essential omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acid (FA) is an attractive concept as anticancer agent because it exerts selective cytotoxic on human breast cancer cells without affecting normal cells. This selective toxicity has been identified to be due, at least in part, to the production of lipid peroxides and free radicals. Interestingly, a novel hypothesis for GLA-induced tumor cell toxicity has recently been proposed. GLA, through a molecular mechanism involving the lipogenic enzyme fatty acid synthase (FAS), coordinately interrupts the pathways that replenish the pools of metabolic intermediates in the citric acid cycle (cellular anaplerosis). First, supraphysiological concentrations of GLA inhibit glycolysis, while a cytochrome P450-dependent epoxidation of GLA generates epoxides metabolites for GLA that would mimic the inhibitory action of standard FAS inhibitors such as cerulenin and C75. Second, GLA-epoxide inhibits FAS activity, thus resulting in the accumulation of cytosolic malonyl-CoA which, in turn, inhibits carnitine palmitoyl transferase I (CPT-I) and prevents FA oxidation. The recent characterization of GLA as a novel regulator of FAS expression in breast cancer cells supports and further expands this hypothesis, and directly involves FAS-dependent de novo fatty acid synthesis as the mechanism of GLA-induced toxicity to tumor cells. We hypothesize that, at low (physiological) concentrations, the inhibitory effect of GLA on FAS-regulated breast cancer cell survival is not specific and is due to cell toxicity caused by lipid peroxidation. Taking into account that the inhibitory effect of FAs on the expression of FAS in cultured hepatocytes has been shown to be related to a non-specific peroxidative mechanism, a similar GLA-dependent FAS regulatory mechanism involving peroxidative products may occur in normal and neoplastic tissues. At high (supraphysiological) concentrations of GLA, the specific downregulation of FAS gene expression leads to accumulation of the substrate for FAS, malonyl-CoA, that, as a result of FAS blockade, continue to be generated by the rate-limiting enzyme of the fatty acid biosynthetic pathway acetyl-CoA carboxilase, which is not inhibited in the absence of FAS-catalyzed long chain endogenous fatty acids. Physiologically, the elevated levels of malonyl-CoA occurring during FA biosynthesis reduce FA oxidation to prevent a futile cycle of simultaneous FA synthesis and degradation. Paradoxicall

    Topics: Breast Neoplasms; Carnitine O-Palmitoyltransferase; Epoxy Compounds; Fatty Acid Synthases; Fatty Acids; Female; gamma-Linolenic Acid; Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic; Humans; Malonyl Coenzyme A

2005
Fatty acid synthase inhibition in human breast cancer cells leads to malonyl-CoA-induced inhibition of fatty acid oxidation and cytotoxicity.
    Biochemical and biophysical research communications, 2001, Jul-13, Volume: 285, Issue:2

    Inhibition of fatty acid synthase (FAS) induces apoptosis in human breast cancer cells in vitro and in vivo without toxicity to proliferating normal cells. We have previously shown that FAS inhibition causes a rapid increase in malonyl-CoA levels identifying malonyl-CoA as a potential trigger of apoptosis. In this study we further investigated the role of malonyl-CoA during FAS inhibition. We have found that: [i] inhibition of FAS with cerulenin causes carnitine palmitoyltransferase-1 (CPT-1) inhibition and fatty acid oxidation inhibition in MCF-7 human breast cancer cells likely mediated by elevation of malonyl-CoA; [ii] cerulenin cytotoxicity is due to the nonphysiological state of increased malonyl-CoA, decreased fatty acid oxidation, and decreased fatty acid synthesis; and [iii] the cytotoxic effect of cerulenin can be mimicked by simultaneous inhibition of CPT-1, with etomoxir, and fatty acid synthesis with TOFA, an acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC) inhibitor. This study identifies CPT-1 and ACC as two new potential targets for cancer chemotherapy.

    Topics: Acetyl-CoA Carboxylase; Apoptosis; Breast Neoplasms; Carnitine O-Palmitoyltransferase; Cell Survival; Cerulenin; Enzyme Inhibitors; Epoxy Compounds; Fatty Acid Synthases; Fatty Acids; Female; Furans; Humans; Hypolipidemic Agents; Kinetics; Malonyl Coenzyme A; Models, Biological; Oxidation-Reduction; Tumor Cells, Cultured

2001
Malonyl-coenzyme-A is a potential mediator of cytotoxicity induced by fatty-acid synthase inhibition in human breast cancer cells and xenografts.
    Cancer research, 2000, Jan-15, Volume: 60, Issue:2

    A biologically aggressive subset of human breast cancers and other malignancies is characterized by elevated fatty-acid synthase (FAS) enzyme expression, elevated fatty acid (FA) synthesis, and selective sensitivity to pharmacological inhibition of FAS activity by cerulenin or the novel compound C75. In this study, inhibition of FA synthesis at the physiologically regulated step of carboxylation of acetyl-CoA to malonyl-CoA by 5-(tetradecyloxy)-2-furoic acid (TOFA) was not cytotoxic to breast cancer cells in clonogenic assays. FAS inhibitors induced a rapid increase in intracellular malonyl-CoA to several fold above control levels, whereas TOFA reduced intracellular malonyl-CoA by 60%. Simultaneous exposure of breast cancer cells to TOFA and an FAS inhibitor resulted in significantly reduced cytotoxicity and apoptosis. Subcutaneous xenografts of MCF7 breast cancer cells in nude mice treated with C75 showed FA synthesis inhibition, apoptosis, and inhibition of tumor growth to less than 1/8 of control volumes, without comparable toxicity in normal tissues. The data suggest that differences in intermediary metabolism render tumor cells susceptible to toxic fluxes in malonyl-CoA, both in vitro and in vivo.

    Topics: Animals; Antineoplastic Agents; Breast Neoplasms; Cell Survival; Cerulenin; Enzyme Inhibitors; Fatty Acid Synthases; Female; Furans; Humans; Hypolipidemic Agents; Malonyl Coenzyme A; Mice; Mice, Nude; Tumor Cells, Cultured; Tumor Stem Cell Assay

2000
Fatty acid synthesis: a potential selective target for antineoplastic therapy.
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 1994, Jul-05, Volume: 91, Issue:14

    OA-519 is a prognostic molecule found in tumor cells from breast cancer patients with markedly worsened prognosis. We purified OA-519 from human breast carcinoma cells, obtained its peptide sequence, and unambiguously identified it as fatty acid synthase through sequence homology and enzymology. Tumor fatty acid synthase is an approximately 270-kDa polypeptide which specifically abolished immunostaining of human breast cancers by anti-OA-519 antibodies. Tumor fatty acid synthase oxidized NADPH in a malonyl-CoA-dependent fashion and synthesized fatty acids composed of 80% palmitate, 10% myristate, and 10% stearate from acetyl-CoA, malonyl-CoA, and NADPH with a specific activity of 624 nmol of NADPH oxidized per min per mg. Tumor cell lines with elevated fatty acid synthase showed commensurate increases in incorporation of [U-14C]acetate into acylglycerols demonstrating that fatty acid synthase increases occur in the context of overall increases in endogenous fatty acid synthesis. Cerulenin inhibited acylglycerol synthesis in tumor cells and fibroblast controls in a dose-dependent fashion and also caused a growth inhibition which generally paralleled the level of endogenous fatty acid synthesis. Supraphysiologic levels of palmitate, 14 microM in dimethyl sulfoxide, significantly reversed the growth inhibition caused by cerulenin at concentrations of up to 5 micrograms/ml, indicating that cerulenin-mediated growth inhibition was due to fatty acid synthase inhibition.

    Topics: Acetates; Antibodies; Antigens, Neoplasm; Biomarkers, Tumor; Blood Proteins; Breast Neoplasms; Carbon Radioisotopes; Cell Division; Cell Line; Cerulenin; Drug Design; Fatty Acid Synthases; Fatty Acids; Female; Haptoglobins; Humans; Immunohistochemistry; Kinetics; Malonyl Coenzyme A; Palmitic Acid; Palmitic Acids; Prognosis; Tumor Cells, Cultured

1994