Influence of inositol pyrophosphates on cellular energy dynamics

Z Szijgyarto, A Garedew, C Azevedo, A Saiardi - Science, 2011 - science.org
Science, 2011science.org
With its high-energy phosphate bonds, adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is the main
intracellular energy carrier. It also functions in most signaling pathways, as a phosphate
donor or a precursor for cyclic adenosine monophosphate. We show here that inositol
pyrophosphates participate in the control of intracellular ATP concentration. Yeasts devoid of
inositol pyrophosphates have dysfunctional mitochondria but, paradoxically, contain four
times as much ATP because of increased glycolysis. We demonstrate that inositol …
With its high-energy phosphate bonds, adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is the main intracellular energy carrier. It also functions in most signaling pathways, as a phosphate donor or a precursor for cyclic adenosine monophosphate. We show here that inositol pyrophosphates participate in the control of intracellular ATP concentration. Yeasts devoid of inositol pyrophosphates have dysfunctional mitochondria but, paradoxically, contain four times as much ATP because of increased glycolysis. We demonstrate that inositol pyrophosphates control the activity of the major glycolytic transcription factor GCR1. Thus, inositol pyrophosphates regulate ATP concentration by altering the glycolytic/mitochondrial metabolic ratio. Metabolic reprogramming through inositol pyrophosphates is an evolutionary conserved mechanism that is also preserved in mammalian systems.
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