1 Laura Bassi Centre of Expertise-THERAPEP, Research Program for Receptor Biochemistry and Tumor Metabolism, Department of Pediatrics, 2 Department of Pediatrics, Paracelsus Medical University, Salzburg, Austria.
Transl Pediatr. 2015 Jan;4(1):20-32. doi: 10.3978/j.issn.2224-4336.2015.01.04.
To support high proliferation, the majority of cancer cells undergo fundamental metabolic changes such as increasing their glucose uptake and shifting to glycolysis for ATP production at the expense of far more efficient mitochondrial energy production by oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS), which at first glance is a paradox. This phenomenon is known as the Warburg effect. However, enhanced glycolysis is necessary to provide building blocks for anabolic growth. Apart from the generation of ATP, intermediates of glycolysis serve as precursors for a variety of biosynthetic pathways essential for cell proliferation. In the last 10-15 years the field of tumor metabolism has experienced an enormous boom in interest. It is now well established that tumor suppressor genes and oncogenes often play a central role in the regulation of cellular metabolism. Therefore, they significantly contribute to the manifestation of the Warburg effect. While much attention has focused on adult solid tumors, so far there has been comparatively little effort directed at elucidation of the mechanism responsible for the Warburg effect in childhood cancers. In this review we focus on metabolic pathways in neuroblastoma (NB) and Wilms tumor (WT), the two most frequent solid tumors in children. Both tumor types show alterations of the OXPHOS system and glycolytic features. Chromosomal alterations and activation of oncogenes like MYC or inactivation of tumor suppressor genes like TP53 can in part explain the changes of energy metabolism in these cancers. The strict dependence of cancer cells on glucose metabolism is a fairly common feature among otherwise biologically diverse types of cancer. Therefore, inhibition of glycolysis or starvation of cancer cells through glucose deprivation via a high-fat low-carbohydrate diet may be a promising avenue for future adjuvant therapeutic strategies.
为了支持高增殖,大多数癌细胞经历了基本的代谢变化,例如增加葡萄糖摄取并转向糖酵解以产生 ATP,而牺牲了通过氧化磷酸化(OXPHOS)产生的远更有效的线粒体能量产生,这乍一看是一个悖论。这种现象被称为瓦博格效应。然而,增强的糖酵解对于提供合成代谢生长所需的构建块是必要的。除了生成 ATP 之外,糖酵解的中间产物还作为细胞增殖所必需的各种生物合成途径的前体。在过去的 10-15 年中,肿瘤代谢领域的兴趣经历了巨大的繁荣。现在已经确立,肿瘤抑制基因和癌基因经常在细胞代谢的调节中发挥核心作用。因此,它们对瓦博格效应的表现有重大贡献。虽然已经有很多注意力集中在成人实体肿瘤上,但到目前为止,对于阐明儿童癌症中瓦博格效应的机制的努力相对较少。在这篇综述中,我们重点介绍神经母细胞瘤(NB)和肾母细胞瘤(WT)的代谢途径,这是儿童中最常见的两种实体肿瘤。这两种肿瘤类型都显示出氧化磷酸化系统和糖酵解特征的改变。染色体改变和癌基因如 MYC 的激活或肿瘤抑制基因如 TP53 的失活可以部分解释这些癌症中能量代谢的变化。癌细胞对葡萄糖代谢的严格依赖是不同类型的癌症中相当常见的特征。因此,通过高脂肪低碳水化合物饮食剥夺葡萄糖来抑制糖酵解或使癌细胞饥饿可能是未来辅助治疗策略的一个有前途的途径。