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The Warburg effect: Evolving interpretations of an established concept
Affiliation:1. School of Health, Polytechnic of Porto (ESS/P.PORTO), Porto, Portugal;2. Biochemistry Unit, Department of Biomedicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Porto (FMUP), Porto, Portugal;3. Instituto de Inovação e Investigação em Saúde (I3S), University of Porto, Portugal;4. CoreLab, Hospital Centre of Porto University (CHUP), Porto, Portugal;5. Department of Life Sciences, Faculty of Sciences and Technology, Centre for Functional Ecology (CFE), University of Coimbra, Coimbra;6. Laboratory of Cell Biology, Unit for Multidisciplinary Research in Biomedicine (UMIB), Department of Microscopy, Institute of Biomedical Sciences Abel Salazar (ICBAS), University of Porto, Porto, Portugal;7. Department of Genetics, Faculty of Medicine, University of Porto, Portugal;8. Faculty of Medicine, University of Santiago de Compostela, Galiza, Spain
Abstract:Metabolic reprogramming and altered bioenergetics have emerged as hallmarks of cancer and an area of active basic and translational cancer research. Drastically upregulated glucose transport and metabolism in most cancers regardless of the oxygen supply, a phenomenon called the Warburg effect, is a major focuses of the research. Warburg speculated that cancer cells, due to defective mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS), switch to glycolysis for ATP synthesis, even in the presence of oxygen. Studies in the recent decade indicated that while glycolysis is indeed drastically upregulated in almost all cancer cells, mitochondrial respiration continues to operate normally at rates proportional to oxygen supply. There is no OXPHOS-to-glycolysis switch but rather upregulation of glycolysis. Furthermore, upregulated glycolysis appears to be for synthesis of biomass and reducing equivalents in addition to ATP production. The new finding that a significant amount of glycolytic intermediates is diverted to the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP) for production of NADPH has profound implications in how cancer cells use the Warburg effect to cope with reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation and oxidative stress, opening the door for anticancer interventions taking advantage of this. Recent findings in the Warburg effect and its relationship with ROS and oxidative stress controls will be reviewed. Cancer treatment strategies based on these new findings will be presented and discussed.
Keywords:Warburg effect  Metabolism reprogram  Glucose transport  ROS  HIF  MYC
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