Use of Cells Expressing γ Subunit Variants to Identify Diverse Mechanisms of AMPK Activation

Simon A. Hawley(University of Dundee), Fiona A. Ross(University of Dundee), Cyrille Chevtzoff(University of Dundee), Kevin A. Green(University of Dundee), A. Mark Evans(University of Dundee), Sarah Fogarty(University of Dundee), Mhairi C. Towler(University of Dundee), Laura A. Brown(University of Dundee), Oluseye A. Ogunbayo(University of Edinburgh), A. Mark Evans(University of Edinburgh), D. Grahame Hardie(University of Dundee)
Cell Metabolism
June 1, 2010
Cited by 762Open Access
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Abstract

A wide variety of agents activate AMPK, but in many cases the mechanisms remain unclear. We generated isogenic cell lines stably expressing AMPK complexes containing AMP-sensitive (wild-type, WT) or AMP-insensitive (R531G) gamma2 variants. Mitochondrial poisons such as oligomycin and dinitrophenol only activated AMPK in WT cells, as did AICAR, 2-deoxyglucose, hydrogen peroxide, metformin, phenformin, galegine, troglitazone, phenobarbital, resveratrol, and berberine. Excluding AICAR, all of these also inhibited cellular energy metabolism, shown by increases in ADP:ATP ratio and/or by decreases in cellular oxygen uptake measured using an extracellular flux analyzer. By contrast, A769662, the Ca(2+) ionophore, A23187, osmotic stress, and quercetin activated both variants to varying extents. A23187 and osmotic stress also increased cytoplasmic Ca(2+), and their effects were inhibited by STO609, a CaMKK inhibitor. Our approaches distinguish at least six different mechanisms for AMPK activation and confirm that the widely used antidiabetic drug metformin activates AMPK by inhibiting mitochondrial respiration.


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