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Dive into the research topics where Aaron M. Hosios is active.

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Featured researches published by Aaron M. Hosios.


Cell | 2015

Supporting Aspartate Biosynthesis Is an Essential Function of Respiration in Proliferating Cells

Lucas B. Sullivan; Dan Y. Gui; Aaron M. Hosios; Lauren N. Bush; Elizaveta Freinkman; Matthew G. Vander Heiden

Mitochondrial respiration is important for cell proliferation; however, the specific metabolic requirements fulfilled by respiration to support proliferation have not been defined. Here, we show that a major role of respiration in proliferating cells is to provide electron acceptors for aspartate synthesis. This finding is consistent with the observation that cells lacking a functional respiratory chain are auxotrophic for pyruvate, which serves as an exogenous electron acceptor. Further, the pyruvate requirement can be fulfilled with an alternative electron acceptor, alpha-ketobutyrate, which provides cells neither carbon nor ATP. Alpha-ketobutyrate restores proliferation when respiration is inhibited, suggesting that an alternative electron acceptor can substitute for respiration to support proliferation. We find that electron acceptors are limiting for producing aspartate, and supplying aspartate enables proliferation of respiration deficient cells in the absence of exogenous electron acceptors. Together, these data argue a major function of respiration in proliferating cells is to support aspartate synthesis.


Cell | 2013

PKM2 isoform-specific deletion reveals a differential requirement for pyruvate kinase in tumor cells.

William J. Israelsen; Talya L. Dayton; Shawn M. Davidson; Brian Prescott Fiske; Aaron M. Hosios; Gary Bellinger; Jie Li; Yimin Yu; Mika Sasaki; James W. Horner; Laura N. Burga; Jianxin Xie; Michael J. Jurczak; Ronald A. DePinho; Clary B. Clish; Tyler Jacks; Richard G. Kibbey; Gerburg Wulf; Dolores Di Vizio; Gordon B. Mills; Lewis C. Cantley; Matthew G. Vander Heiden

The pyruvate kinase M2 isoform (PKM2) is expressed in cancer and plays a role in regulating anabolic metabolism. To determine whether PKM2 is required for tumor formation or growth, we generated mice with a conditional allele that abolishes PKM2 expression without disrupting PKM1 expression. PKM2 deletion accelerated mammary tumor formation in a Brca1-loss-driven model of breast cancer. PKM2 null tumors displayed heterogeneous PKM1 expression, with PKM1 found in nonproliferating tumor cells and no detectable pyruvate kinase expression in proliferating cells. This suggests that PKM2 is not necessary for tumor cell proliferation and implies that the inactive state of PKM2 is associated with the proliferating cell population within tumors, whereas nonproliferating tumor cells require active pyruvate kinase. Consistent with these findings, variable PKM2 expression and heterozygous PKM2 mutations are found in human tumors. These data suggest that regulation of PKM2 activity supports the different metabolic requirements of proliferating and nonproliferating tumor cells.


Science | 2016

Tissue of origin dictates branched-chain amino acid metabolism in mutant Kras-driven cancers

Jared R. Mayers; Margaret E. Torrence; Laura V. Danai; Thales Papagiannakopoulos; Shawn M. Davidson; Matthew R. Bauer; Allison N. Lau; Brian W. Ji; Purushottam D. Dixit; Aaron M. Hosios; Alexander Muir; Christopher R. Chin; Elizaveta Freinkman; Tyler Jacks; Brian M. Wolpin; Dennis Vitkup; Matthew G. Vander Heiden

Tumor genetics guides patient selection for many new therapies, and cell culture studies have demonstrated that specific mutations can promote metabolic phenotypes. However, whether tissue context defines cancer dependence on specific metabolic pathways is unknown. Kras activation and Trp53 deletion in the pancreas or the lung result in pancreatic ductal adenocarinoma (PDAC) or non–small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC), respectively, but despite the same initiating events, these tumors use branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) differently. NSCLC tumors incorporate free BCAAs into tissue protein and use BCAAs as a nitrogen source, whereas PDAC tumors have decreased BCAA uptake. These differences are reflected in expression levels of BCAA catabolic enzymes in both mice and humans. Loss of Bcat1 and Bcat2, the enzymes responsible for BCAA use, impairs NSCLC tumor formation, but these enzymes are not required for PDAC tumor formation, arguing that tissue of origin is an important determinant of how cancers satisfy their metabolic requirements.


Molecular Cell | 2015

Lack of Evidence for PKM2 Protein Kinase Activity

Aaron M. Hosios; Brian Prescott Fiske; Dan Y. Gui; Matthew G. Vander Heiden

The role of pyruvate kinase M2 (PKM2) in cell proliferation is controversial. A unique function of PKM2 proposed to be important for the proliferation of some cancer cells involves the direct activity of this enzyme as a protein kinase; however, a detailed biochemical characterization of this activity is lacking. Using [(32)P]-phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) we examine the direct substrates of PKM2 using recombinant enzyme and in vitro systems where PKM2 is genetically deleted. Labeling of some protein species from [(32)P]-PEP can be observed; however, most were dependent on the presence of ADP, and none were dependent on the presence of PKM2. In addition, we also failed to observe PKM2-dependent transfer of phosphate from ATP directly to protein. These findings argue against a role for PKM2 as a protein kinase.


Cancer and Metabolism | 2014

Acetate metabolism in cancer cells

Aaron M. Hosios; Matthew G. Vander Heiden

No abstract


Nature Cell Biology | 2018

Aspartate is an endogenous metabolic limitation for tumour growth

Lucas B. Sullivan; Alba Luengo; Laura V. Danai; Lauren N. Bush; Frances F. Diehl; Aaron M. Hosios; Allison N. Lau; Sarah Elmiligy; Scott Malstrom; Caroline A. Lewis; Matthew G. Vander Heiden

Defining the metabolic limitations of tumour growth will help to develop cancer therapies1. Cancer cells proliferate slower in tumours than in standard culture conditions, indicating that a metabolic limitation may restrict cell proliferation in vivo. Aspartate synthesis can limit cancer cell proliferation when respiration is impaired2–4; however, whether acquiring aspartate is endogenously limiting for tumour growth is unknown. We confirm that aspartate has poor cell permeability, which prevents environmental acquisition, whereas the related amino acid asparagine is available to cells in tumours, but cancer cells lack asparaginase activity to convert asparagine to aspartate. Heterologous expression of guinea pig asparaginase 1 (gpASNase1), an enzyme that produces aspartate from asparagine5, confers the ability to use asparagine to supply intracellular aspartate to cancer cells in vivo. Tumours expressing gpASNase1 grow at a faster rate, indicating that aspartate acquisition is an endogenous metabolic limitation for the growth of some tumours. Tumours expressing gpASNase1 are also refractory to the growth suppressive effects of metformin, suggesting that metformin inhibits tumour growth by depleting aspartate. These findings suggest that therapeutic aspartate suppression could be effective to treat cancer.Garcia-Bermudez et al. and Sullivan et al. show that endogenous aspartate is a limiting metabolite for cancer cell proliferation under hypoxia and in tumours, and that metformin depletes aspartate to limit tumour growth.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2016

Biophysical changes reduce energetic demand in growth factor–deprived lymphocytes

Vivian C. Hecht; Lucas B. Sullivan; Robert J. Kimmerling; Dong Hwee Kim; Aaron M. Hosios; Max A. Stockslager; Mark M. Stevens; Joon Ho Kang; Denis Wirtz; Matthew G. Vander Heiden; Scott R. Manalis

Changes to the biophysical properties of lymphocytes are identified as an adaptive response to acute nutrient stress that occurs before the induction of autophagy.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2018

The redox requirements of proliferating mammalian cells

Aaron M. Hosios; Matthew G. Vander Heiden

Cell growth and division require nutrients, and proliferating cells use a variety of sources to acquire the amino acids, lipids, and nucleotides that support macromolecule synthesis. Lipids are more reduced than other nutrients, whereas nucleotides and amino acids are typically more oxidized. Cells must therefore generate reducing and oxidizing (redox) equivalents to convert consumed nutrients into biosynthetic precursors. To that end, redox cofactor metabolism plays a central role in meeting cellular redox requirements. In this Minireview, we highlight the biosynthetic pathways that involve redox reactions and discuss their integration with metabolism in proliferating mammalian cells.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Cooperative nutrient accumulation sustains growth of mammalian cells.

Sungmin Son; Mark M. Stevens; Hui Xiao Chao; Carson C. Thoreen; Aaron M. Hosios; Lawrence D. Schweitzer; Yao-Chung Weng; Kris C. Wood; David M. Sabatini; Matthew G. Vander Heiden; Scott R. Manalis

The coordination of metabolic processes to allow increased nutrient uptake and utilization for macromolecular synthesis is central for cell growth. Although studies of bulk cell populations have revealed important metabolic and signaling requirements that impact cell growth on long time scales, whether the same regulation influences short-term cell growth remains an open question. Here we investigate cell growth by monitoring mass accumulation of mammalian cells while rapidly depleting particular nutrients. Within minutes following the depletion of glucose or glutamine, we observe a growth reduction that is larger than the mass accumulation rate of the nutrient. This indicates that if one particular nutrient is depleted, the cell rapidly adjusts the amount that other nutrients are accumulated, which is consistent with cooperative nutrient accumulation. Population measurements of nutrient sensing pathways involving mTOR, AKT, ERK, PKA, MST1, or AMPK, or pro-survival pathways involving autophagy suggest that they do not mediate this growth reduction. Furthermore, the protein synthesis rate does not change proportionally to the mass accumulation rate over these time scales, suggesting that intracellular metabolic pools buffer the growth response. Our findings demonstrate that cell growth can be regulated over much shorter time scales than previously appreciated.


The EMBO Journal | 2018

Yap regulates glucose utilization and sustains nucleotide synthesis to enable organ growth

Andrew G. Cox; Allison Tsomides; Dean Yimlamai; Katie L. Hwang; Joel B. Miesfeld; Giorgio G. Galli; Brendan H. Fowl; Michael Fort; Kimberly Y Ma; Mark R. Sullivan; Aaron M. Hosios; Erin Snay; Min Yuan; Kristin K. Brown; Evan C. Lien; Sagar Chhangawala; Matthew L. Steinhauser; John M. Asara; Yariv Houvras; Brian A. Link; Matthew G. Vander Heiden; Fernando D. Camargo; Wolfram Goessling

The Hippo pathway and its nuclear effector Yap regulate organ size and cancer formation. While many modulators of Hippo activity have been identified, little is known about the Yap target genes that mediate these growth effects. Here, we show that yap−/− mutant zebrafish exhibit defects in hepatic progenitor potential and liver growth due to impaired glucose transport and nucleotide biosynthesis. Transcriptomic and metabolomic analyses reveal that Yap regulates expression of glucose transporter glut1, causing decreased glucose uptake and use for nucleotide biosynthesis in yap−/− mutants, and impaired glucose tolerance in adults. Nucleotide supplementation improves Yap deficiency phenotypes, indicating functional importance of glucose‐fueled nucleotide biosynthesis. Yap‐regulated glut1 expression and glucose uptake are conserved in mammals, suggesting that stimulation of anabolic glucose metabolism is an evolutionarily conserved mechanism by which the Hippo pathway controls organ growth. Together, our results reveal a central role for Hippo signaling in glucose metabolic homeostasis.

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Matthew G. Vander Heiden

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Scott R. Manalis

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Brian Prescott Fiske

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Lucas B. Sullivan

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Shawn M. Davidson

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Vivian C. Hecht

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Dan Y. Gui

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Elizaveta Freinkman

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Gary Bellinger

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Laura V. Danai

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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