Who controls the ATP supply in cancer cells? Biochemistry lessons to understand cancer energy metabolism

•OxPhos can be the main ATP supplier in cancer cells under normoxia.•Glycolysis can be the main ATP supplier in cancer cells under hypoxia and low glucose.•Cancer glycolysis is mainly controlled by GLUT, HK, HPI and glycogenolysis.•Cancer OxPhos is controlled by the respiratory complexes and the cel...

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Veröffentlicht in:The international journal of biochemistry & cell biology 2014-05, Vol.50, p.10-23
Hauptverfasser: Moreno-Sánchez, Rafael, Marín-Hernández, Alvaro, Saavedra, Emma, Pardo, Juan P., Ralph, Stephen J., Rodríguez-Enríquez, Sara
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•OxPhos can be the main ATP supplier in cancer cells under normoxia.•Glycolysis can be the main ATP supplier in cancer cells under hypoxia and low glucose.•Cancer glycolysis is mainly controlled by GLUT, HK, HPI and glycogenolysis.•Cancer OxPhos is controlled by the respiratory complexes and the cellular ATP demand.•Glutamine transformation into citrate may not require a functional Krebs cycle and respiratory chain. Applying basic biochemical principles, this review analyzes data that contrasts with the Warburg hypothesis that glycolysis is the exclusive ATP provider in cancer cells. Although disregarded for many years, there is increasing experimental evidence demonstrating that oxidative phosphorylation (OxPhos) makes a significant contribution to ATP supply in many cancer cell types and under a variety of conditions. Substrates oxidized by normal mitochondria such as amino acids and fatty acids are also avidly consumed by cancer cells. In this regard, the proposal that cancer cells metabolize glutamine for anabolic purposes without the need for a functional respiratory chain and OxPhos is analyzed considering thermodynamic and kinetic aspects for the reductive carboxylation of 2-oxoglutarate catalyzed by isocitrate dehydrogenase. In addition, metabolic control analysis (MCA) studies applied to energy metabolism of cancer cells are reevaluated. Regardless of the experimental/environmental conditions and the rate of lactate production, the flux-control of cancer glycolysis is robust in the sense that it involves the same steps: glucose transport, hexokinase, hexosephosphate isomerase and glycogen degradation, all at the beginning of the pathway; these steps together with phosphofructokinase 1 also control glycolysis in normal cells. The respiratory chain complexes exert significantly higher flux-control on OxPhos in cancer cells than in normal cells. Thus, determination of the contribution of each pathway to ATP supply and/or the flux-control distribution of both pathways in cancer cells is necessary in order to identify differences from normal cells which may lead to the design of rational alternative therapies that selectively target cancer energy metabolism.
ISSN:1357-2725
1878-5875
DOI:10.1016/j.biocel.2014.01.025