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Aerobic Glycolysis & Cancer

Aerobic Glycolysis & Cancer. Gemma Leung, Imninder Gill, David Liu, Cheryl Wong. PHM142 Fall 2012 Instructor: Dr. Jeffrey Henderson. Glycolysis. Oxidative phosphorylation. ATP Yield. What is the Warburg Effect?.

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Aerobic Glycolysis & Cancer

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  1. Aerobic Glycolysis & Cancer Gemma Leung, Imninder Gill, David Liu, Cheryl Wong PHM142 Fall 2012 Instructor: Dr. Jeffrey Henderson

  2. Glycolysis

  3. Oxidative phosphorylation

  4. ATP Yield

  5. What is the Warburg Effect? • Observation that most cancer cells predominantly produce energy through a high rate of glycolysis followed by lactic acid fermentation, rather than through oxidative phosphorylation in the mitochondria.

  6. Question: Why do cancer cells exhibit the Warburg effect? • Hypotheses: • Hypoxic conditions • Alternate uses for substrates and enzymes for the TCA • Observation: Other cells undergoing rapid cellular expansion also undergo aerobic glycolysis.

  7. Question: How is the Warburg effect established in cancer cells?

  8. Possible mechanisms: • Transcriptional regulation of the Warburg effect • Metabolic isoform switching • Post-translational regulation • Micro-RNA regulation • Genomic regulation • ATP consumption in futile cycles • Mitochondrial dysfunction

  9. Possible mechanisms: • Transcriptional regulation of the Warburg effect • Hypoxia Inducible Factor (HIF) • C-Myc oncogene • P53 tumour suppressor gene

  10. HIF & Glycolysis

  11. HIF & Glycolysis

  12. Myc-oncogene & Glycolysis

  13. P53 & Glycolysis

  14. Cancer Detection With Pyruvate kinase

  15. Cancer Detection With Positron Electron Tomography (PET)

  16. Targeting Glycolysis Disrupting glycolysis in cancer cells via • Inhibiting glucose uptake • Inhibiting glycolysis-related enzymes

  17. Summary • The Warburg effect, or aerobic glycolysis, is the observation that most cancer cells produce energy through a high rate of glycolysis followed by lactic acid fermentation, even in the presence of oxygen. • Changes in the transcription rate of enzymes and transporters involved in glycolysis and oxidative metabolism are believed to push cancer cells into adopting aerobic glycolysis. • These changes are a result of transcription factors such as hypoxia inducible factor, c-Myc and p53. • PKM2 can function as a transcriptional cofactor of HIF1. Hydroxylation of PKM2 with prolyl hydroxylase 3 can enhance its binding to HIF1 • Binding of PKM2 to HIF1 aids HIF1 binding and helps bring in p300 to hypoxia gene response elements, increasing gene expression rate • Cancer cells have been found to have embryonic PKM2 and no PKM1. Through suppression of PKM2 and addition of PKM1, tumour growth can be slowed or stopped. • Using glucose analog FDG, PET can pinpoint the location of cancer cells • Drugs currently in development/clinical trials to disrupt aerobic glycolysis in cancer cells, are focused on blocking glucose uptake, or inhibiting specific glycolytic enzymes. • Problems with unwanted toxicity towards non-cancerous cells, and specificity to cancerous cells.

  18. References • Bensinger, S.J. and Christofk, H.R., 2012. New aspects of the Warburg effect in cancer cell biology. Seminars in Cell and Developmental Biology, 23(4), pp. 352-361. • Bertout J.A., Patel S.A., Simon M.C. The impact of O2 availability on human cancer. Nature Review Cancer 2008;8:967–75. • Bustamante E, Pedersen PL (September 1977). "High aerobic glycolysis of rat hepatoma cells in culture: role of mitochondrial hexokinase". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A.74 (9): 3735–3739. PMID 198801. • Cardaci, S., Desideri, E., & Ciriolo, M. (2012). Targeting aerobic glycolysis: 3-bromopyruvate as a promising anticancer drug. Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes, 44(1), 17-29. • Christ, E. J., 2009. The Warburg effect and its role in cancer detection and therapy. [online] (2007) Available at: <http://academiccommons.columbia.edu/catalog/ac:129890> [14 October 2012]. • Christofk, H.R., Heiden, M.G.V., Harris, M.H., Ramanathan, A., Gerszten, R.E., Wei, R., et al. 2008. The M2 splice isoform of pyruvate kinase is important for cancer metabolism and tumour growth. Nature , 452(7184), pp. 230-333. • Dang C.V., Kim J.W., Gao P., Yustein J. The interplay between MYC and HIF in cancer. Nature Review Cancer 2008;8:51–6. • Diwan, J. J., 1998. Glycolysis and Fermentation. [online] (2007) Available at: <http://www.rpi.edu/dept/bcbp/molbiochem/MBWeb/mb1/part2/glycolysis.htm> [14 October 2012]. • Gatenby RA; Gillies RJ (2004). "Why do cancers have high aerobic glycolysis?". Nature Reviews Cancer4 (11). PMID 15516961. • Kim JW, Dang CV. "Cancer's molecular sweet tooth and the Warburg effect". Cancer Res.66: 8927–8930. doi:10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-06-1501. PMID 1 • Lunt Sophia, Heiden Matthew (2011). "Aerobic Glycolysis: Meeting the Metabolic Requirements of Cell Proliferation". Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology, Vol 27: 441-464. • Milane, L., Duan, Z., & Amiji, M. (2011). Pharmacokinetics and biodistribution of lonidamine/paclitaxel loaded, egfr-targeted nanoparticles in an orthotopic animal model of multi-drug resistant breast cancer. Nanomedicine, 7(4), 435-444. • Northeast Mississippi Community College, n.d.Chapter 7. [online] Available at: <http://www2.nemcc.edu/bkirk/Template%201/BIOLOGYCHAPTER7NOTES.htm> [14 October 2012]. • Pauwels E., Stokkel M. et al. (2000). "Positron-emission topography with [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose". J Cancer Res ClinOncol 126: 549-559. • Rochester Institute of Technology, 2012. Positron Emission Tomography. [online] Available at: <http://medinfo.rit.edu/modules/aux/slides/showslides.maml?t_LectureID=16&t_HeaderText=Computer+in+Medicine#> [14 October 2012]. • Semenza GL. HIF-1: upstream and downstream of cancer metabolism. Current Opinion on Genetic Development 2010;20:51–6. • Singh, P..K., Mehla, K., Hollingsworth, M.A., and Johnson, K.R. 2011. Regulation of Aerobic Glycolysis by microRNAs in Cancer. Molecular and Cellular Pharmacology (Windsor Mill, Md.), 3(3), pp. 125-134. • Vander Heiden, M. (2011). Targeting cancer metabolism: a therapeutic window opens. Nature Reviews Drug Discovery, 10(1), 671-684. • VousdenK.H., Ryan K.M. p53 and metabolism. Nature Review Cancer 2009;9:691–700.

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