Lost in Transition: Start-Up of Glycolysis Yields Subpopulations of Nongrowing Cells

Author:

van Heerden Johan H.123,Wortel Meike T.123,Bruggeman Frank J.13,Heijnen Joseph J.24,Bollen Yves J. M.35,Planqué Robert6,Hulshof Josephus6,O’Toole Tom G.7,Wahl S. Aljoscha24,Teusink Bas123

Affiliation:

1. Systems Bioinformatics/Amsterdam Institute for Molecules, Medicines and Systems (AIMMS)/Netherlands Institute for Systems Biology, VU University, De Boelelaan 1085, 1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.

2. Kluyver Centre for Genomics of Industrial Fermentation/Netherlands Consortium for Systems Biology (NCSB), Delft University of Technology, Julianalaan 67, 2628 BC Delft, Netherlands.

3. Department of Molecular Cell Biology, VU University, 1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.

4. Department of Biotechnology, Delft University of Technology, 2628 BC Delft, Netherlands.

5. LaserLaB Amsterdam, VU University, 1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.

6. Department of Mathematics, VU University, 1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.

7. Department of Molecular Cell Biology and Immunology, Vrije University Medical Center, v/d Boechorststraat 7, 1081 BT Amsterdam, Netherlands.

Abstract

Introduction Cells use multilayered regulatory systems to respond adequately to changing environments or perturbations. Failure in regulation underlies cellular malfunctioning, loss of fitness, or disease. How molecular components dynamically interact to give rise to robust and adaptive responses is not well understood. Here, we studied how the model eukaryote Saccharomyces cerevisiae can cope with transition to high glucose levels, a failure of which results in metabolic malfunctioning and growth arrest. Methods We combined experimental and modeling approaches to unravel the mechanisms used by yeast to cope with sudden glucose availability. We studied growth characteristics and metabolic state at population and single-cell levels (through flow cytometry and colony plating) of the wild type and of mutants unable to transit properly to excess glucose; such mutants are defective in trehalose synthesis, a disaccharide associated with stress resistance. Dynamic 13 C tracer enrichment was used to estimate dynamic intracellular fluxes immediately after glucose addition. Mathematical modeling was used to interpret and generalize results and to suggest subsequent experiments. Results The failure to cope with glucose is caused by imbalanced reactions in glycolysis, the essential pathway in energy metabolism in most organisms. In the failure mode, the first steps of glycolysis carry more flux than the downstream steps, resulting in accumulating intermediates at constant low levels of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and inorganic phosphate. We found that cells with such an unbalanced glycolysis coexist with vital cells with normal glycolytic function. Spontaneous, nongenetic metabolic variability among individual cells determines which state is reached and consequently which cells survive. In mutants of trehalose metabolism, only 0.01% of the cells started to grow on glucose; in the wild type, the success rate was still only 93% (i.e., 7% of wild-type yeast did not properly start up glycolysis). Mathematical models predicted that the dynamics of inorganic phosphate is a key determinant in successful transition to glucose, and that phosphate release through ATP hydrolysis reduces the probability of reaching an imbalanced state. 13 C-labeling experiments confirmed the hypothesis that trehalose metabolism constitutes a futile cycle that would provide proper phosphate balance: Upon a glucose pulse, almost 30% of the glucose is transiently shuttled into trehalose metabolism. Discussion Our work reveals how cell fate can be determined by glycolytic dynamics combined with cell heterogeneity purely at the metabolic level. Specific regulatory mechanisms are required to initiate the glycolytic pathway; in yeast, trehalose cycling pushes glycolysis transiently into the right direction, after which cycling stops. The coexistence of two modes of glycolysis—an imbalanced state and the normal functional state—arises from the fundamental design of glycolysis. This makes the imbalanced state a generic risk for humans as well, extending our fundamental knowledge of this central pathway that is dysfunctional in diseases such as diabetes and cancer.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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