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Revisited Metabolic Control and Reprogramming Cancers by Means of the Warburg Effect in Tumor Cells

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms231710037

Keywords

Warburg's effect; glucose utilization; aerobic glycolysis; metabolic selectivity; cytosolic to mitochondrial pathway determinant; Metabolic enzyme; apoptotic death; carbohydrate metabolic reprogramming

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Ministry of Education, Korean government [NRF2019R1A6A1A10073079]

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Aerobic glycolysis is a characteristic of many human cancers, playing a crucial role in the growth, invasion, immune escape, and drug resistance of cancer cells. The glycolysis pathway consists of multiple enzymatic reactions, with increased levels of glycolytic proteins and enzymatic activities observed in cancer cells. In the Warburg effect, cancer cells rely on glycolysis to generate energy instead of oxidative phosphorylation. The understanding of the Warburg effect can lead to the development of targeted therapies for cancer treatment.
Aerobic glycolysis is an emerging hallmark of many human cancers, as cancer cells are defined as a metabolically abnormal system. Carbohydrates are metabolically reprogrammed by its metabolizing and catabolizing enzymes in such abnormal cancer cells. Normal cells acquire their energy from oxidative phosphorylation, while cancer cells acquire their energy from oxidative glycolysis, known as the Warburg effect. Energy-metabolic differences are easily found in the growth, invasion, immune escape and anti-tumor drug resistance of cancer cells. The glycolysis pathway is carried out in multiple enzymatic steps and yields two pyruvate molecules from one glucose (Glc) molecule by orchestral reaction of enzymes. Uncontrolled glycolysis or abnormally activated glycolysis is easily observed in the metabolism of cancer cells with enhanced levels of glycolytic proteins and enzymatic activities. In the Warburg effect, tumor cells utilize energy supplied from lactic acid-based fermentative glycolysis operated by glycolysis-specific enzymes of hexokinase (HK), keto-HK-A, Glc-6-phosphate isomerase, 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase/fructose-2,6-biphosphatase, phosphofructokinase (PFK), phosphor-Glc isomerase (PGI), fructose-bisphosphate aldolase, phosphoglycerate (PG) kinase (PGK)1, triose phosphate isomerase, PG mutase (PGAM), glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, enolase, pyruvate kinase isozyme type M2 (PKM2), pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH), PDH kinase and lactate dehydrogenase. They are related to glycolytic flux. The key enzymes involved in glycolysis are directly linked to oncogenesis and drug resistance. Among the metabolic enzymes, PKM2, PGK1, HK, keto-HK-A and nucleoside diphosphate kinase also have protein kinase activities. Because glycolysis-generated energy is not enough, the cancer cell-favored glycolysis to produce low ATP level seems to be non-efficient for cancer growth and self-protection. Thus, the Warburg effect is still an attractive phenomenon to understand the metabolic glycolysis favored in cancer. If the basic properties of the Warburg effect, including genetic mutations and signaling shifts are considered, anti-cancer therapeutic targets can be raised. Specific therapeutics targeting metabolic enzymes in aerobic glycolysis and hypoxic microenvironments have been developed to kill tumor cells. The present review deals with the tumor-specific Warburg effect with the revisited viewpoint of recent progress.

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