New Insights into Altered Glycolysis in Cancer [Apr. 9, 2026]

 

Glycolysis supports cancer cell proliferation by providing both metabolic intermediates and spatially localized energy. Defining how glycolytic regulation changes during tumor progression and drug resistance is important for identifying metabolic vulnerabilities in cancer. Recent studies showed that, in cancer cells, mitochondria-detached hexokinase supports the Warburg effect by promoting glucose uptake, lactate production, and glycolytic ATP supply for proliferation. Another study showed that HR+/HER2− breast cancer cells resistant to CDK4/6 inhibitors display enhanced glycolysis and mTORC1 signaling, while mTOR-driven autophagy suppression increases sensitivity to metabolic inhibitors such as metformin and DCA. Together, these findings highlight glycolytic control as a relevant factor in cancer cell survival and treatment response.

Hexokinase detachment from mitochondria drives the Warburg effect to support compartmentalized ATP production (Nature Metabolism, 2026)
SummaryHexokinase catalyzes the first step of glucose metabolism, and while mitochondrial-bound hexokinase has long been thought to promote glycolysis, this study showed that, in cancer cells, the mitochondria-detached form instead supports the Warburg effect, including glucose uptake and lactate production. The authors further concluded that the importance of this metabolic state lies not in increasing total ATP levels, but in supplying glycolytic ATP to intracellular sites needed for cell proliferation, offering a new explanation for the Warburg effect. 

Highlighted technique: To examine hexokinase localization, the authors expressed an HA-tagged mitochondrial construct in K562 cells, immunopurified mitochondria, and assessed the enrichment of HK1 and HK2 in the mitochondrial fraction by immunoblotting. To analyze glycolysis, they collected conditioned medium at multiple time points along the growth curve to measure glucose uptake and lactate secretion, and further used 13C-glucose tracing to track the incorporation of glucose-derived carbon into downstream metabolites.

mTOR-driven autophagy suppression defines metabolic vulnerability in CDK4/6 inhibitor-resistant HR+/HER2− breast cancer (Cell Death & Disease, 2026)
Summary: This study showed that HR+/HER2− breast cancer cells resistant to CDK4/6 inhibitor treatment exhibit enhanced glycolysis and mTORC1 signaling, and that mTOR-driven autophagy suppression prevents adaptation to metabolic stress. As a result, these resistant cells become highly sensitive to metabolic inhibitors such as metformin and DCA, leading to cell death and suggesting a potential therapeutic strategy for treatment-resistant breast cancer.

Highlighted technique: To investigate changes in autophagy in HR+/HER2− breast cancer cells, the authors generated cells stably expressing an LC3-HiBiT reporter, which enables luminescence-based tracking of the degradation dynamics of the autophagy marker LC3, and quantified changes in luminescence after treatment with the autophagy inhibitor chloroquine and the metabolic inhibitors metformin and DCA to assess autophagic flux. In addition, they performed cell viability and apoptosis assays under metabolically inhibitory conditions to evaluate vulnerability to metabolic inhibition.

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Metabolism Activity and Autophagic Flux Indicators (click to open/close)
Target Kit & Probes
Glycolysis/Oxidative phosphorylation Assay Glycolysis/OXPHOS Assay Kit
High sensitivity glucose uptake assay for plate reader Glucose Uptake Plate Assay Kit
High sensitivity glucose uptake assay Glucose Uptake Assay Kit-Blue / Green / Red
ATP mesurement ATP Assay Kit-Luminescence
Lactic Acid Measurement Lactate Assay Kit-WST
Intact Mitochondria Fractionation IntactMito Fractionation Kit for Tissue
MitoComplex-I Activity Assay MitoComplex-I Activity Assay Kit
First-time Autophagy Research Autophagic Flux Assay Kit
Application Note (click to open/close)
  > Experimental Example: Hepatotoxicity test of drug-induced lipidosis using high-content imaging

Propranolol (a sympathetic β-receptor blocker) was added to a human hepatocellular carcinoma cell line (HepG2 cells), and changes in lipid droplets were observed under a fluorescence microscope. The accumulation of lipid droplets was analyzed by measuring the number, area, and fluorescence intensity of lipid droplets from the acquired microscopic images.

High Content Analysis (HCA) microscope system
(Nikon Corporation https://www.microscope.healthcare.nikon.com/)

For details of staining and analysis methods, please refer to "APPLICATION NOTE: Hepatotoxicity test of drug-induced lipidosis using high-content imaging" by Nikon Corporation.

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