Metabolic reprogramming: a cancer hallmark even warburg did not anticipate.


Abstract

Cancer metabolism has long been equated with aerobic glycolysis, seen by early biochemists as primitive and inefficient.

Despite these early beliefs, the metabolic signatures of cancer cells are not passive responses to damaged mitochondria but result from oncogene-directed metabolic reprogramming required to support anabolic growth.

Recent evidence suggests that metabolites themselves can be oncogenic by altering cell signaling and blocking cellular differentiation.

No longer can cancer-associated alterations in metabolism be viewed as an indirect response to cell proliferation and survival signals.

We contend that altered metabolism has attained the status of a core hallmark of cancer.


Full Text


Subjects


Similar articles

Authors


Publication date

2012-03-23


Journal

Cancer cell
Cancer Cell (1878-3686)

Journal topics


Language

Eng.


Copyright

Cancer Biology and Genetics Program, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY 10065, USA.


Release reference

Cancer Cell. 2012 Mar;21(3):297-308



Related books


Español | English

© Galenicom 1999-2013