To better characterize metabolic properties of cancer
cells, Jain et al. (p. 1040; see the Perspective by Tomita and Kami)
measured systematically the concentrations of hundreds of metabolites in cell
culture medium in which 60 different cancer cell lines were growing. The
fastest growing cancer cells tended to consume glycine, whereas more slowly
growing cells excreted some glycine. The rapidly growing cancer cells appeared
to need glycine for synthesis of purine nucleotides required for continued
synthesis of DNA. Interfering with glycine metabolism slowed growth of the
rapidly proliferating cancer cells. Thus, an increased dependence on glycine by
rapidly growing cancer cells could potentially provide a target for therapeutic
intervention.
1. Metabolite Profiling Identifies a Key Role for Glycine in Rapid Cancer Cell Proliferation