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Article Abstract

Attraction of glioblastoma cells to potassium was suspected when glioblastoma cells clustered around dying cells and migrated towards serum (high [K]) and increased potassium. Potassium channel proteins (KCN family, 90 members) mediating alterations in the transmembrane flux may provide K that releases H bound to inner membranes in cancer cells for cytosolic proton transfer, possibly conformational in water (Grotthuss), to extrusion sites. Cell settling and migration assay results led to collecting 70 studies, unbiased by the authors for inclusion of KCN genes, that detected KCN differentially expressed genes (DEGs). Of 53 KCN DEGs found among 29 malignancies, 62.3% encoded H-sensitive proteins. KCN DEGs encoding H-sensitive proteins were more prevalent in 50 studies involving one or more categories (seven oncogenes and histone/DNA modifiers) versus those with none; = 0.0325. Pertinent genes for lactate outflow, etc., had relatively normal levels of expression. Brain tumors in REMBRANDT (database) showed altered expression of KCN genes encoding H-sensitive proteins in glioblastomas versus less invasive oligodendrogliomas of patients on anti-seizure medications, with less /Kir5.1; = 5.32 × 10 in glioblastomas. Altered H-sensitive potassium flux via the KCN family, downstream of oncogenes and histone/DNA modifiers, putatively incites proton transfers for H release during pH reversal (pHi > pHe) in cancer.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12384032PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biom15081177DOI Listing

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