| Literature DB >> 26791262 |
Chunxia Li1, Guifeng Zhang2, Lei Zhao3, Zhijun Ma4, Hongbing Chen5.
Abstract
Nearly a century ago, Otto Warburg made the ground-breaking observation that cancer cells, unlike normal cells, prefer a seemingly inefficient mechanism of glucose metabolism: aerobic glycolysis, a phenomenon now referred to as the Warburg effect. The finding that rapidly proliferating cancer cells favors incomplete metabolism of glucose, producing large amounts of lactate as opposed to synthesizing ATP to sustain cell growth, has confounded scientists for years. Further investigation into the metabolic phenotype of cancer has expanded our understanding of this puzzling conundrum, and has opened new avenues for the development of anti-cancer therapies. Enhanced glycolytic flux is now known to allow for increased synthesis of intermediates for sustaining anabolic pathways critical for cancer cell growth. Alongside the increase in glycolysis, cancer cells transform their mitochondria into synthesis machines supported by augmented glutaminolysis, supplying lipid production, amino acid synthesis, and the pentose phosphate pathways. Inhibition of several of the key enzymes involved in these pathways has been demonstrated to effectively obstruct cancer cell growth and multiplication, sensitizing them to apoptosis. The modulation of various regulatory proteins involved in metabolic processes is central to cancerous reprogramming of metabolism. The finding that members of one of the major protein families involved in cell death regulation also aberrantly regulated in cancers, the Bcl-2 family of proteins, are also critical mediators of metabolic pathways, provides strong evidence for the importance of the metabolic shift to cancer cell survival. Targeting the anti-apoptotic members of the Bcl-2 family of proteins is proving to be a successful way to selectively target cancer cells and induce apoptosis. Further understanding of how cancer cells modify metabolic regulation to increase channeling of substrates into biosynthesis will allow for the discovery of novel drug targets to treat cancer. In the present review, we focused on the recent developments in therapeutic targeting of different steps in glycolysis, glutaminolysis and on the metabolic regulatory role of Bcl-2 family proteins.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26791262 PMCID: PMC4721116 DOI: 10.1186/s12957-016-0769-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 2.754
Fig. 1Reprogramming of the glycolytic pathway in cancer cells. Cancer cells rely on increased glycolytic flux, increasing glucose uptake, and producing large amounts of lactate. The expression of the PKM2 isoform allows for flexibility in that the dimeric form will exhibit decreased activity, promoting accumulation of glycolytic intermediates that can be shunted into the pentose phosphate pathway and nucleotide synthesis. Decreased oxidative phosphorylation in normal cells would lead to decreased energy charge and increased AMP, activating AMPK. Cancer cells often harbor mutations in the upstream AMPK kinase LKB1, without whose phosphorylation activity, AMPK cannot be activated and therefore cannot inhibit anabolic pathways such as nucleotide synthesis
Fig. 2Increased glutaminolysis and the role of the mitochondria in cancer cells. The mitochondria of cancer cells switch from the canonical function of oxidative phosphorylation and ATP production to synthesis of anabolic intermediates that can be utilized for lipid and amino acid synthesis. This is supported by high rates of glutaminolysis, Glutamine is converted to glutamate by glutaminase, and glutamate is then transaminated into α-ketoglutarate, which contributes to citrate and malate synthesis. Both of these metabolites can then be exported from the mitochondria, malate converted to pyruvate and then lactate to produce NADPH. Citrate can also be metabolized to α-ketoglutarate, synthesizing NADPH, or alternatively be channeled into lipid synthesis. PDH pyruvate dehydrogenase complex, MDH malate dehydrogenase, SDH succinate dehydrogenase, α-KGDH α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex, CS citrate synthase, TA transaminase, GDC glutamate dehydrogenase