Abstract

Anomalous increase in glycolytic activity defines one of the key metabolic alterations in cancer cells. A realization of this feature has led to critical advancements in cancer detection techniques such as positron emission tomography (PET) as well as a number of therapeutic avenues targeting the key glycolytic steps within a cancer cell. A normal healthy cell’s survival relies on a sensitive balance between the primordial glycolysis and a more regulated mitochondrial bioenergetics. The salient difference between these two bioenergetics pathways is that oxygen availability is an obligatory requirement for mitochondrial pathway while glycolysis can function without oxygen. Early observations that some cancer cells up-regulate glycolytic activity even in the presence of oxygen (aerobic glycolysis) led to a hypothesis that such an altered cancer cell metabolism stems from inherent mitochondrial dysfunction. While a general validity of this hypothesis is still being debated, a number of recent research efforts have yielded clarity on the physiological origins of this aerobic glycolysis phenotype in cancer cells. Building on these recent studies, we present a generalized scheme of cancer cell metabolism and propose a novel hypothesis that might rationalize new avenues of cancer intervention.

Highlights

  • Anomalous increase in glycolytic activity defines one of the key metabolic alterations in cancer cells

  • This conjecture has been confirmed in many cancer cells in culture that retain intact mitochondrial function despite an increased glucose metabolism and tumorigenic profile

  • Metabolic switch within a cancer cell could occur in three distinct phases: the first phase characterized by biomassdriven aerobic glycolysis, the second phase characterized by mitochondrial-dysfunctiondriven aerobic glycolysis and the third phase characterized by hypoxia-driven anaerobic glycolysis

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Summary

Introduction

Anomalous increase in glycolytic activity defines one of the key metabolic alterations in cancer cells. It is conceivable that mitochondrial function supports the first phase of metabolic switch in cancer cells at least in biomass accumulation if not in ATP supply.

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