p53 and metabolism: from mechanism to therapeutics

The tumor cell changes itself and its microenvironment to adapt to different situations, including action of drugs and other agents targeting tumor control. Therefore, metabolism plays an important role in the activation of survival mechanisms to keep the cell proliferative potential. The Warburg ef...

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Veröffentlicht in:Oncotarget 2018-05, Vol.9 (34), p.23780-23823
Hauptverfasser: Simabuco, Fernando M, Morale, Mirian G, Pavan, Isadora C B, Morelli, Ana P, Silva, Fernando R, Tamura, Rodrigo E
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container_end_page 23823
container_issue 34
container_start_page 23780
container_title Oncotarget
container_volume 9
creator Simabuco, Fernando M
Morale, Mirian G
Pavan, Isadora C B
Morelli, Ana P
Silva, Fernando R
Tamura, Rodrigo E
description The tumor cell changes itself and its microenvironment to adapt to different situations, including action of drugs and other agents targeting tumor control. Therefore, metabolism plays an important role in the activation of survival mechanisms to keep the cell proliferative potential. The Warburg effect directs the cellular metabolism towards an aerobic glycolytic pathway, despite the fact that it generates less adenosine triphosphate than oxidative phosphorylation; because it creates the building blocks necessary for cell proliferation. The transcription factor p53 is the master tumor suppressor; it binds to more than 4,000 sites in the genome and regulates the expression of more than 500 genes. Among these genes are important regulators of metabolism, affecting glucose, lipids and amino acids metabolism, oxidative phosphorylation, reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation and growth factors signaling. Wild-type and mutant p53 may have opposing effects in the expression of these metabolic genes. Therefore, depending on the p53 status of the cell, drugs that target metabolism may have different outcomes and metabolism may modulate drug resistance. Conversely, induction of p53 expression may regulate differently the tumor cell metabolism, inducing senescence, autophagy and apoptosis, which are dependent on the regulation of the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway and/or ROS induction. The interplay between p53 and metabolism is essential in the decision of cell fate and for cancer therapeutics.
doi_str_mv 10.18632/oncotarget.25267
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title p53 and metabolism: from mechanism to therapeutics
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