Kodama Manabu, Nakayama Keiichi I
Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Medical Institute of Bioregulation, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan.
Bioessays. 2020 Dec;42(12):e2000169. doi: 10.1002/bies.202000169. Epub 2020 Nov 9.
Carbon and nitrogen are essential elements for life. Glucose as a carbon source and glutamine as a nitrogen source are important nutrients for cell proliferation. About 100 years ago, it was discovered that cancer cells that have acquired unlimited proliferative capacity and undergone malignant evolution in their host manifest a cancer-specific remodeling of glucose metabolism (the Warburg effect). Only recently, however, was it shown that the metabolism of glutamine-derived nitrogen is substantially shifted from glutaminolysis to nucleotide biosynthesis during malignant progression of cancer-which might be referred to as a "second" Warburg effect. In this review, address the mechanism and relevance of this metabolic shift of glutamine-derived nitrogen in human cancer. We also examine the clinical potential of anticancer therapies that modulate the metabolic pathways of glutamine-derived nitrogen. This shift may be as important as the shift in carbon metabolism, which has long been known as the Warburg effect.
碳和氮是生命的必需元素。葡萄糖作为碳源,谷氨酰胺作为氮源,是细胞增殖的重要营养素。大约100年前,人们发现,在宿主体内获得无限增殖能力并经历恶性演化的癌细胞表现出葡萄糖代谢的癌症特异性重塑(瓦伯格效应)。然而,直到最近才发现,在癌症的恶性进展过程中,谷氨酰胺衍生氮的代谢从谷氨酰胺分解显著转向核苷酸生物合成,这可能被称为“第二种”瓦伯格效应。在这篇综述中,探讨了人类癌症中谷氨酰胺衍生氮这种代谢转变的机制及相关性。我们还研究了调节谷氨酰胺衍生氮代谢途径的抗癌疗法的临床潜力。这种转变可能与长期以来被称为瓦伯格效应的碳代谢转变同样重要。