| Literature DB >> 29688867 |
Le Tang1,2,3, Fang Wei1,2, Yingfen Wu2, Yi He2,4, Lei Shi2, Fang Xiong1, Zhaojian Gong2, Can Guo2, Xiayu Li2,3, Hao Deng3, Ke Cao3, Ming Zhou1,2,3, Bo Xiang1,2,3, Xiaoling Li1,2,3, Yong Li2,5, Guiyuan Li1,2,3, Wei Xiong6,7,8, Zhaoyang Zeng9,10,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Radioresistance is a major factor leading to the failure of radiotherapy and poor prognosis in tumor patients. Following the application of radiotherapy, the activity of various metabolic pathways considerably changes, which may result in the development of resistance to radiation. MAIN BODY: Here, we discussed the relationships between radioresistance and mitochondrial and glucose metabolic pathways, aiming to elucidate the interplay between the tumor cell metabolism and radiotherapy resistance. In this review, we additionally summarized the potential therapeutic targets in the metabolic pathways. SHORTEntities:
Keywords: Cancer; Metabolic pathway; Radioresistance; Radiotherapy; Sensitivity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29688867 PMCID: PMC5914062 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-018-0758-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Fig. 1The biological effects of radiation and the mechanism of radiation resistance. The outer ring indicates the biological effects of IR under normal conditions. The abnormal alterations of these effects will further induce the occurrence of radiation resistance. The inner ring indicates the mechanism of radiation resistance and the biological changes in the occurrence of radioresistance. These abnormal changes are the important reasons for treatment failure of cancer patients
Fig. 2A schematic model illustrating the relationship between glucose metabolism and radiation resistance. Radiation-resistant cells exhibit an active glycolytic phenotype, and the enzymes in the glycolytic pathway play an important role in the process of radioresistance and can serve as targets for improving the efficacy of radiotherapy. In addition, HIF is able to activate glycolytic enzymes and promote the occurrence of radioresistance by inducing cell autophagy and angiogenesis. * was used to represent the targets to enhance radiosensitivity, the corresponding radiosensitizers are indicated in the same color in rectangle
Fig. 3A schematic model illustrating the relationship between mitochondrial metabolismand radiation resistance. IR inhibits the oxidative stress of mitochondria, causes abnormal expression of mitochondrial protein and increases the mitochondrial membrane potential, thereby promoting DNA damage repair and inhibiting apoptosis, leading to the occurrence of radioresistance. * was used to represent the targets to enhance radiosensitivity, the corresponding radiosensitizers are indicated in the same color in rectangle
Metabolism-associated targets in radioresistance and the radiosensitization methods
| Items | Targets | Radiosensitizer | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Glycose | GLUT1 | Apigenin,WZB117 | [ |
| MCT1 | CHC | [ | |
| LDHA | FX-11, miR-34 | [ | |
| PKM2 | miR-133, DADA | [ | |
| HK2 | 2-DG | [ | |
| HIF | Chetomin, KNK437, 2-ME2, | [ | |
| Barberin, NVP-BEZ235, miR-216a | [ | ||
| NSC74859, Stattic, Docetaxel | [ | ||
| miR-21, miR-124, miR-144 | [ | ||
| Mitochondrial metabolism | Oxidative stress | Sorafenib, Ceremides, DADA | [ |
| MMP | PD98059, HDIs, Paclitaxel | [ |