| Literature DB >> 28270771 |
Francesca Cutruzzolà1, Giorgio Giardina1, Marina Marani1, Alberto Macone1, Alessandro Paiardini2, Serena Rinaldo1, Alessio Paone1.
Abstract
Prostate cancer is one of the most common types of cancer in western country males but the mechanisms involved in the transformation processes have not been clearly elucidated. Alteration in cellular metabolism in cancer cells is recognized as a hallmark of malignant transformation, although it is becoming clear that the biological features of metabolic reprogramming not only differ in different cancers, but also among different cells in a type of cancer. Normal prostate epithelial cells have a peculiar and very inefficient energy metabolism as they use glucose to synthesize citrate that is secreted as part of the seminal liquid. During the transformation process, prostate cancer cells modify their energy metabolism from inefficient to highly efficient, often taking advantage of the interaction with other cell types in the tumor microenvironment that are corrupted to produce and secrete metabolic intermediates used by cancer cells in catabolic and anabolic processes. We recapitulate the metabolic transformations occurring in the prostate from the normal cell to the metastasis, highlighting the role of the microenvironment and summarizing what is known on the molecular mechanisms involved in the process.Entities:
Keywords: Warburg effect; inflammation; metabolism; microenvironment; prostate cancer
Year: 2017 PMID: 28270771 PMCID: PMC5318430 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2017.00097
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Metabolic alterations in prostate, breast and liver cancer cells.
| Ox Phos | Inactive | Active | Inactive | Inactive | Active | Inactive |
| Krebs cycle | Inactive | Active | Inactive | Inactive | Active | Inactive |
| Consumed | Consumed | Consumed | Consumed | – | Consumed | |
| – | Consumed | Accumulat. | Secreted | Imported | Secreted | |
| Secreted | Consumed | – | – | Consumed | – | |
The main metabolic alterations of glucose metabolism in prostate, breast (TN and estrogen positive) and liver cancer cells are summarized (Elia et al., .
Figure 1Metabolic alteration in the tumor microenvironment during prostate cancer progression. Normal prostate epithelial cells have a peculiar metabolic profile, the Krebs cycle and the OXPHOS are inhibited and the citrate is released as component of the seminal liquid. Prostate cancer cells corrupt cancer associated fibroblasts (CAFS) to activate the Warburg effect and to secrete lactate that is used by cancer cells for anabolic and catabolic processes, CAFS, in turn, induce OXPHOS activation in cancer cells. Prostate cancer cells preferentially metastasize in the bone. Cancer cells stimulate lypolisys in the adipocytes that secrete glycerol; adipocytes, in turn, stimulate the Warburg effect in cancer cells. Glycerol uptake and consumption by cancer cells has been described elsewhere, but it has not been demonstrated in this model.
Figure 2Hypothetical mechanism of inflammation-induced cancer feeding. The cytokines are released by infected cells and induce the Warburg effect in a different subpopulation, the lactate secreted would be used by transformed cells for anabolic and catabolic processes as described by Sonveaux et al. (2008).