| Literature DB >> 20459610 |
Alexei Vazquez1, Jiangxia Liu, Yi Zhou, Zoltán N Oltvai.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cancer cells simultaneously exhibit glycolysis with lactate secretion and mitochondrial respiration even in the presence of oxygen, a phenomenon known as the Warburg effect. The maintenance of this mixed metabolic phenotype is seemingly counterintuitive given that aerobic glycolysis is far less efficient in terms of ATP yield per moles of glucose than mitochondrial respiration.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20459610 PMCID: PMC2880972 DOI: 10.1186/1752-0509-4-58
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Syst Biol ISSN: 1752-0509
Figure 1Reduced model of cell metabolism. Schematic representation of ATP generation pathways via aerobic glycolysis (glycolysis + pyruvate reduction to lactate) and oxidative phosphorylation (glycolysis + mitochondrial respiration). The variable f, denotes the glucose uptake rate, fand f, the components of the glucose uptake routed towards lactate excretion and respiration, respectively, and fthe ATP production rate. Intermediate substrates of glucose catabolism are also used in a third process accounting for the production of precursor metabolites needed in anabolic processes (f). The pathways considered in our model are shown in the gray-shaded area, while fis treated as constant.
Figure 2Catabolic regimes within proliferating mammalian cells. a, b, c, d) Model-predicted (lines) and measured (symbols) fluxes as a function of the glucose uptake rate: a) and b) LS mouse cells, c) hybridoma cells and d) mixture of cancer and normal cells. The two different metabolic regimes are indicated by the white and gray backgrounds, respectively. All fluxes are reported in units of f1, the glucose uptake rate threshold, reported in panel e).