An energy trap for tumor cells: Researchers find enzyme blockade halts liver cancer growth

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Nature Metabolism (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s42255-024-01201-w>

New approach to fighting cancer: Energy trap for tumor cells

ALDOA represents a unique vulnerability in glycolysis independent of oncogenotype and environmental condition. Credit: Nature Metabolism (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s42255-024-01201-w

Glycolysis is a central metabolic pathway by which cells obtain energy from sugar. Cancer cells in particular have long been thought to depend on the energy obtained through glycolysis, a phenomenon known as the Warburg effect. Today we know that cancer cells can use energy sources more flexibly than previously thought. Even when glycolysis is blocked, they survive by obtaining their energy through the respiratory chain.

This makes results published by Almut Schulze and colleagues from the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) all the more surprising: When the researchers blocked the enzyme aldolase A, which catalyzes an important step in glycolysis, liver cancer cells experienced "energy stress" and ceased their division activity. The team demonstrated this both in mouse liver cancer cells and in several human cancer cell lines.

The findings are published in the journal Nature Metabolism.

However, when the researchers blocked an earlier step in glycolysis, the enzyme glucose-6-phosphate isomerase, this had no effect on the growth of the cancer cells.

"The glycolytic enzyme aldolase is essential for liver cancer cells, although the glycolytic pathway itself is apparently dispensable," says metabolism expert Schulze, summarizing the findings.

At first glance, the result seems surprising, since the enzyme blockade inhibits the sugar degradation pathway in both cases. However, a closer look at the biochemical steps of glycolysis provides clarity: The metabolic pathway, which involves many reactions, is divided into two parts. First, the cell has to invest energy to generate the highly energetic intermediate fructose-bisphosphate.

Energy in a trap

This is where aldolase A comes in. If it is switched off, fructose bisphosphate accumulates in the cell, and the energy bound in it remains unused, trapped as it is. The cell cannot reap the energy profit from the steps that would normally follow. Glycolysis has reversed from an energy-producing to an energy-consuming process. What's more, the lack of energy further stimulates the production of fructose bisphosphate, creating a vicious circle.

Sooner or later, this leads to energy consumption exceeding energy production. In liver cancer cells, this results in a massive energy deficiency, the cell cycle is stopped and tumor growth is inhibited. The team also demonstrated this in liver cancer-bearing mice: If the animals' aldolase A was genetically switched off, the cancer growth was reduced and the mice survived significantly longer.

"By switching off Aldolase A, we can overcome the metabolic plasticity of cancer cells. We not only block energy production through glycolysis, but also prevent the cell from switching to other metabolic pathways, because the energy is trapped in the fructose bisphosphate. Targeted inhibition of aldolase A could therefore be a promising strategy for combating cancer cells," says Marteinn Snaebjornsson from DKFZ, the first author of the publication.

However, the only aldolase A inhibitor currently available has so far only been tested experimentally and is not approved as a drug. The Heidelberg team is now testing the substance for its potential in cancer therapy.

It is important to note that even a slight reduction in the activity of aldolase A could be enough to drive cancer cells into the energy trap.

"Normal cells should tolerate this because they take up smaller amounts of glucose and produce less energy-rich fructose bisphosphate. The Warburg effect is therefore a weak point of cancer cells that makes them more sensitive to a blockade of aldolase A," says Schulze, who led the study.

The results show how a deeper understanding of tumor metabolism can enable innovative approaches to cancer treatment. These findings could pave the way for new, highly specific therapies that target the weaknesses of cancer metabolism while sparing healthy cells.

More information: Marteinn T. Snaebjornsson et al, Targeting aldolase A in hepatocellular carcinoma leads to imbalanced glycolysis and energy stress due to uncontrolled FBP accumulation, Nature Metabolism (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s42255-024-01201-w

Journal information: Nature Metabolism

Citation: An energy trap for tumor cells: Researchers find enzyme blockade halts liver cancer growth (2025, January 21) retrieved 23 January 2025 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2025-01-energy-tumor-cells-enzyme-blockade.html

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Zusammenfassen
一项新的研究发现,抑制酶醛缩酶A(ALDOA)可以有效阻止肝癌细胞的生长。尽管癌细胞通常依赖于糖酵解获取能量,但研究表明,ALDOA在糖酵解中扮演着关键角色。研究团队发现,当ALDOA被抑制时,肝癌细胞会经历能量压力,停止分裂。这是因为ALDOA的抑制导致能量富集的果糖-1,6-二磷酸在细胞内积累,形成能量“陷阱”,使细胞无法利用这些能量,最终导致能量消耗超过能量生产。研究还表明,轻微降低ALDOA的活性可能足以使癌细胞进入能量陷阱,而正常细胞则能耐受这种变化。这一发现为癌症治疗提供了新的思路,可能会开发出针对癌细胞代谢弱点的特异性疗法。