Abstract Background/Aim: Cancer metabolism is often viewed as a cooperative reliance on glucose and glutamine; however, whether these nutrients can enforce discrete, non-overlapping metabolic states remains unclear. This study aimed to isolate nutrient-specific regulatory programs. Materials and Methods: MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer cells were cultured under four distinct metabolic environments: glucose/glutamine nutrient-repleted (fed), dual glucose/glutamine deficiency, and isolated repletion of either glucose or glutamine. Groups were evaluated for integrated transcriptomic, metabolomic, and lipidomic profiles to identify only the non-redundant, nutrient-enforced architectures. Results: The data show a mutually restrictive mechanistic state. Glutamine functions as a metabolic architect, restoring glycolytic enzyme transcripts (without lactate production), while inducing PDK1/3 which would decouple glycolysis from the TCA cycle. These changes are concomitant with a glutamine flux toward reductive TCA-driven lipogenesis, citric acid overflow, sterol synthesis (SREBF1/2), structural membrane expansion (phospholipids/sphingolipids) and the unique production of alanine as a nitrogen pool, independent of glycolytic flux. Conversely, glucose alone acts as the executor, licensing chromatin engagement, DNA replication, and mitotic progression. Glucose alone resolved ER stress, restored hexose-phosphate-derived glycosylation (mannose-6-phosphate), enabled lactic acid production, and diverted excess carbon into a triglyceride storage pool (>40% of lipids). Notably, each nutrient suppressed core elements of the other’s program, revealing a reciprocal activation-braking system. Interestingly, ATP yield from glucose or glutamine alone were comparable, but not arbitrary; instead, aligned with the functional state of the cell. Glucose alone supported glycolytic phosphorylation and proliferative execution, as marked by lactate accumulation, whereas glutamine alone supported Krebs cycle-related phosphorylation, characterized by citrate accumulation and the maintenance of cellular structure and membrane infrastructure. Conclusion: Glucose and glutamine enforce a balance of two independent, reciprocally regulated metabolic states. This data provides a systems-level explanation for metabolic resilience in cancer and may lead to the identification of nutrient-specific targets for combination therapy.
Mazzio et al. (Mon,) studied this question.