Abstract

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a primary malignancy of the liver and the third leading cause of cancer death worldwide. The incidence of HCC accounts for more than 90% of primary HCC. Like most solid malignancies, the occurrence and development of HCC are closely related to the Warburg effect. The Warburg effect of HCC is mainly manifested as increased glucose uptake by HCC cells, increased glycolysis, restricted mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation, increased pentose phosphate pathway in HCC cells, and increased glutamine decomposition. As the contribution of glycolysis to the total ATP of tumor cells generally does not exceed 50% to 60%, oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) still makes a considerable contribution to the ATP of tumor cells. In some cases, there will be an anti-Warburg effect. HCC Warburg effect is closely related to HCC cell proliferation, apoptosis, immune escape, migration and invasion, chemotherapy resistance, and treatment failure. The mechanism of the Warburg effect in HCC is complex, involving the expression of stimulating the key glycolysis enzymes by hypoxia-inducible factor-1(HIF-1), the activation of oncogenes and the inactivation of tumor suppressor genes, the continuous activation of related signaling pathways, the participation of noncoding RNA, and the rate of metabolism gene mutation of enzyme. This article synthetically discusses the characteristics of glucose metabolism in HCC cells, the mechanism of Warburg effect, clinical significance, and corresponding treatment strategies and provides new perspectives for the prevention and treatment of HCC.

Highlights

  • Hui Chen,1 Qing Wu,2 Liu Peng,1 Ting Cao,1 Man-Ling Deng,1 Yi-Wen Liu,1 Jia Huang,1 Yang Hu,1 Nian Fu,1 Ke-Bing Zhou,1 Mei-Ling Yang,3 and Xue-Feng Yang 1

  • The Warburg effect of Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is mainly manifested as increased glucose uptake by HCC cells, increased glycolysis, restricted mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation, increased pentose phosphate pathway in HCC cells, and increased glutamine decomposition

  • HCC is a primary liver cancer with high mortality, and its pathogenesis is related to the Warburg effect

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Summary

HCC Warburg Effect

HCC cells mainly rely on glycolysis to supply cell energy, whether aerobic or anaerobic This is the so-called Warburg Phenomenon, known as “aerobic glycolysis,” which is manifested in the increased expression and enhanced activity of the rate-limiting enzyme of glycolysis. In order to meet the needs, tumor cells often rely on the decomposition of glutamine to maintain the TCA cycle and provide biosynthetic precursors and NADPH [15, 16]. It was discovered a long time ago that in the human HCC cell line HepG2 cells, when glutamine is sufficient, the promoter of its transporter ASCT2 is activated, which increases the expression of ASCT2 [17]

HCC Glucose Metabolism Reverse Warburg Effect
Mechanism of Warburg Effect in HCC
The Clinical Significance of the Warburg Effect of HCC Glucose Metabolism
Treatment Strategies for HCC Based on Positive and Negative Warburg Effect
Summary
Findings
Conflicts of Interest
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