Literature DB >> 1477140

Deviant energetic metabolism of glycolytic cancer cells.

L G Baggetto1.   

Abstract

The central glycolytic and oxidative pathways and the ATP-producing mechanisms differ in sane and malignant cells by their regulation and dynamics. Fast-growing, poorly-differentiated cancer cells characteristically show high aerobic glycolysis. In the same way, cholesterol biosynthesis, which occurs by normal pathways in tumors, is deficient in feed-back regulation and in sterol-transport mechanisms. Other metabolic ways are deficient, as for example, intramitochondrial aldehyde catabolism, at the origin of a possible acetaldehyde toxicity, which can be circumvented by the synthesis of an unusual and neutral product for mammalian cells acetoin, through tumoral pyruvate dehydrogenase. If most of the glycolytic pyruvate is deviated to lactate production, little of the remaining carbons enter a truncated Krebs cycle where citrate is preferentially extruded to the cytosol where it feeds sterol synthesis. Glutamine is the major oxidizable substrate by tumor cells. Inside the mitochondrion, it is deaminated to glutamate through a phosphate-dependent glutaminase. Glutamate is then preferentially transaminated to alpha-ketoglutarate that enters the Krebs cycle. Glutamine may be completely oxidized through the abnormal Krebs cycle only if a way of forming acetyl CoA is present: cytosolic malate entering mitochondria is preferentially oxidized to pyruvate + CO2 through an intramitochondrial NAD(P)(+)-malic enzyme, whereas intramitochondrial malate is preferentially oxidized to oxaloacetate through malate dehydrogenase, thus providing a high level of intramitochondrial substrate compartmentation. These and other regulatory aberrations in tumor cells appear to be reflections of a complex set of non-random phenotypic changes, initiated by expression of oncogenes.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1477140     DOI: 10.1016/0300-9084(92)90016-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochimie        ISSN: 0300-9084            Impact factor:   4.079


  75 in total

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Review 3.  The genetic/metabolic transformation concept of carcinogenesis.

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Review 5.  Mitochondrial function, zinc, and intermediary metabolism relationships in normal prostate and prostate cancer.

Authors:  L C Costello; R B Franklin; Pei Feng
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6.  Mayaro virus infection alters glucose metabolism in cultured cells through activation of the enzyme 6-phosphofructo 1-kinase.

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7.  Similar nature of inhibition of mitochondrial respiration of heart tissue and malignant cells by methylglyoxal. A vital clue to understand the biochemical basis of malignancy.

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8.  Metabolic targeting of lactate efflux by malignant glioma inhibits invasiveness and induces necrosis: an in vivo study.

Authors:  Chaim B Colen; Yimin Shen; Farhad Ghoddoussi; Pingyang Yu; Todd B Francis; Brandon J Koch; Michael D Monterey; Matthew P Galloway; Andrew E Sloan; Saroj P Mathupala
Journal:  Neoplasia       Date:  2011-07       Impact factor: 5.715

9.  Metabolic remodeling of malignant gliomas for enhanced sensitization during radiotherapy: an in vitro study.

Authors:  Chaim B Colen; Navid Seraji-Bozorgzad; Brian Marples; Matthew P Galloway; Andrew E Sloan; Saroj P Mathupala
Journal:  Neurosurgery       Date:  2006-12       Impact factor: 4.654

10.  Molecular cloning and characterization of a cellular phosphoprotein that interacts with a conserved C-terminal domain of adenovirus E1A involved in negative modulation of oncogenic transformation.

Authors:  U Schaeper; J M Boyd; S Verma; E Uhlmann; T Subramanian; G Chinnadurai
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1995-11-07       Impact factor: 11.205

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