Our finding that direct phosphorylation at Y
105 inhibits PKM2 activity provides new insight into the molecular mechanism underlying tyrosine kinase–dependent regulation of tumor cell metabolism. We identified PKM2 as a direct substrate of the oncogenic tyrosine kinase FGFR1, which phosphorylates PKM2 at Y
105. Consistent with these findings, our colleagues at Cell Signaling Technologies (CST) have found in phosphoproteomics-based studies that Y
105 of PKM2 is phosphorylated in human cancer cell lines established from different malignancies, including leukemias associated with the oncogenic tyrosine kinases BCR-ABL and FLT3, and solid tumors such as ovarian cancer, glial tumor, lung cancer, and stomach cancer (
24). Therefore, our finding that phosphorylation of Y
105 inhibits PKM2 activity may represent a common, short-term molecular mechanism underlying the Warburg effect in both leukemias and solid tumors, in addition to the long-term changes believed to be regulated by transcription factors, including hypoxia-inducible factor 1 and Myc. However, the mechanism by which lactate production is increased in cancer cells harboring phospho-PKM2 with low activity is unknown.
It has been argued that the stoichiometry of tyrosine phosphorylation of glycolytic enzymes, including pyruvate kinase, is too low to affect their catalytic activity (
8). Indeed, only a small fraction of PKM2 is phosphorylated in FOP2-FGFR1–expressing KG-1a cells, which could not be visualized in isoelectric focusing (IEF) experiments (
fig. S5A). However, our “intermolecular”, or transprotein, FBP-release model suggests that a single PKM2 molecule, when phosphorylated at Y
105, can directly and transiently mediate FBP release from many PKM2 molecules, as proposed by Christofk
et al. (
8). This would allow a small amount of phosphorylated PKM2-Y
105 to convert substantial amounts of PKM2 to the low-activity FBP-unbound state. However, the stoichiometry of PKM2 tyrosine phosphorylation may vary in different cellular contexts. For example, our IEF experiment showed that FGFR1 wild type causes a stoichoimetric shift (>90%) of PKM2 to a more phosphorylated form in 293T cells, compared with cells expressing the FGFR1 KD control (
fig. S5B). Such high stoichiometry could potentially allow Y
105 phosphorylation to inhibit PKM2 in an “intramolecular manner,” in which Y
105 phosphorylation causes a conformational alteration within the same molecule of PKM2 to affect K433-dependent FBP binding. Pyruvate kinase transmits regulatory signals across large distances within a single PKM2 molecule, and the intersubunit interfaces are important for allosteric signal transmission between the binding sites of the PKM2 substrate PEP and cofactor FBP (
25,
26). Y
105 is located on the interface between the A and C domains of PKM2, ~17 Å distal from FBP (
fig. S5C). Because long-range allosteric regulation in PKM2 is possible, phosphorylation of Y
105 could potentially transmit an allosteric signal to the FBP binding site within the same PKM2 molecule, leading to decreased FBP binding. We hypothesize that such an allosteric signal could contribute to FBP release in PKM2 molecules that are Y
105-phosphorylated and act in concert with the “intermolecular” model that may represent the predominant mechanism for phospho-Y
105–dependent inhibition of PKM2.
Christofk
et al. (
8) proposed that binding of tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins inhibits PKM2 by inducing the release of FBP. We found that FGFR1 binds to PKM2 in a tyrosine phosphorylation–dependent manner; however, FGFR1 still binds to PKM2 K433E and Y105F mutants (
fig. S6), and both mutants are catalytically active and resistant to FGFR1-dependent inhibition (). This suggests that Y
105 phosphorylation is the predominant mechanism underlying FGFR1-dependent inhibition of PKM2 through K433, and it is unlikely that the binding of FGFR1 to PKM2 affects PKM2 activity directly. Such an interaction may contribute to inhibition of PKM2 indirectly, because it may be required for FGFR1 to phosphorylate Y
105.
Our finding that cancer cells expressing the active mPKM2 Y105F mutant are more dependent on oxidative phosphorylation for cell metabolism and proliferation than cells with WT mPKM2 is consistent with previous observations, made by Christofk
et al., when they replaced endogenous hPKM2 with mouse PKM1 (mPKM1) in H1299 cells (
8). Most noticeably, both the PKM2 Y105F mutant and PKM1 are catalytically more active than PKM2 and are resistant to tyrosine kinase–dependent inhibition. These studies suggest that the physiological phosphorylation and dephosphorylation kinetics at Y
105 of PKM2 may regulate the switch between aerobic glycolysis and oxidative phosphorylation, perhaps by balancing the ratio between the active and inactive forms of PKM2. Moreover, because either knockdown of PKM2 (
8) or replacement of PKM2 with the catalytically more active Y105F mutant () or PKM1 (
8) effectively attenuates cancer cell proliferation in vitro and in vivo, PKM2 may serve as an interesting therapeutic target in cancer treatment, such that either inhibition or activation of PKM2 may affect cancer cell metabolism and cause tumor regression.