0

Cardiovascular and Metabolic Disease Center
Mitochondrial Research Affinity Collaboration-Laboratories & Engineering

Home > 0

Attacking Cancer’s Sweet Tooth Is Effective Strategy Against Tumors

  • 작성자한진
  • 작성일2006-08-02 11:02:23
  • 조회수6623
  • 첨부파일첨부파일
Newswise — An ancient avenue for producing cellular energy, the glycolytic pathway, could provide a surprisingly rich target for anti-cancer therapies. A team of Harvard Medical School (HMS) researchers knocked down one of the pathway’s enzymes, LDHA, in a variety of fast-growing breast cancer cells, effectively shutting down glycolysis, and implanted the cells in mice. Control animals carrying tumor cells with an intact glycolytic pathway did not survive beyond 10 weeks. In striking contrast, only two of the LDHA-deficient mice died, one at 16 weeks, another at just over 18 weeks. Eighty percent of the mice outlived the four month experiment. The findings by Valeria Fantin, Julie St-Pierre, and Philip Leder appear in the June Cancer Cell. “This is an exciting contribution that reveals a surprising Achilles heel in cancer cells. It also adds to our sense of opportunity for new avenues of cancer therapeutics,” said Stuart Schrieber, Morris Loeb professor and chair of the Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology at Harvard University. As a tumor grows, cells crowd one another and may be cut off from oxygen-carrying blood vessels—a distinct disadvantage since most cells require oxygen to produce the bulk of their energy-storing adenosine triphosphate (ATP). In the 1920s, Otto Warburg proposed that some cancer cells evolved the ability to switch over to an ancient, oxygen-free route, the glycolytic pathway. What is more, they continue to use this pathway even when access to oxygen is restored. Though the so-called Warburg effect has since been confirmed, the role played by glycolysis in cancer has been largely ignored. Few have attempted to attack specific points along the glycolytic pathway to gain a therapeutic effect. “LDHA could be one weak point that we could attack but maybe, if we understand exactly all the steps involved, we could devise alternative strategies to attack the same pathway,” said Fantin, who was an HMS research fellow in genetics when the study was performed. She is currently a research scientist at Merck & Co. What may excite the growing band of researchers who are studying the Warburg effect, and cancer metabolism more generally, is the way the study resolves a long-standing debate about how and why cells switch to glycolysis in the first place. Warburg speculated that cancer cells change over to glycolysis, which occurs in the cytoplasm, because the mitochondria, where oxygen-dependent ATP synthesis occurs, are defective. But the mitochondria of cancer cells appear to be mostly intact, which led many researchers to minimize the importance of the glycolytic switch. The mitochondria do display an intriguing difference, however. Normally, mitochondria turn glucose into ATP through the oxygen-dependent process of oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS). This results in the expulsion of protons, which lowers the mitochondria’s membrane potential. Curiously, the mitochondria of cancer cells exhibit a high membrane potential. Researchers suspected that was because the cells have switched to an alternative means of producing ATP, namely glycolysis, but it was not clear if the glycolytic and mitochondrial pathways were connected in this fashion. It appears the two pathways are reciprocally linked. Fantin and her colleagues found that by shutting down the glycolytic pathway (through the knock down of LDHA), they could lower the mitochondrial membrane potential of tumor cells. What is more, oxygen consumption increased in the knockdown cells, suggesting they were reverting to the mitochondrial OXPHOS pathway—a kind of Warburg effect in reverse. “The findings provide us with an insight into a mechanism that had been suspected in the last six or seven decades,” said Leder, John Emory Andrus professor and chair of the Department of Genetics at HMS. Knocking out the glycolytic pathway could deliver a big blow to tumor cells. “LDHA could be one weak point that we could attack but maybe, if we understand exactly all the steps involved, we could devise alternative strategies to attack the same pathway,” Fantin said. What makes the prospect of anti-glycolytic therapies even more attractive is their potential safety. Healthy cells meet 90 percent of their energy needs through OXPHOS. People who lack the LDHA enzyme appear to function normally though they cannot be pushed toward anaerobic exercise. “They have muscle destruction because they lack an alternative route for producing energy,” Fantin said. It is not clear whether they have a lower indidence of cancer. Also appealing is the idea of combining anti-glycolytic therapies with anti-angiogenic ones. “If you have a molecule that is very stable you could think about delivering it first, obliterating the glycolytic pathway,” said Fantin. Angiogenesis inhibitors would wipe out blood vessels and the oxygen supply with it, leaving the cells with no way to cope. “There is definite potential to combining these things,” she said. Harvard Medical School has more than 7,000 full-time faculty working in eight academic departments based at the School's Boston quadrangle or in one of 47 academic departments at 18 Harvard teaching hospitals and research institutes. Those Harvard hospitals and research institutions include Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Cambridge Health Alliance, the CBR Institute for Biomedical Research, Children's Hospital Boston, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Forsyth Institute, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, Joslin Diabetes Center, Judge Baker Children's Center, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Massachusetts General Hospital, Massachusetts Mental Health Center, McLean Hospital, Mount Auburn Hospital, Schepens Eye Research Institute, Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital, and VA Boston Healthcare System.
Total406 [ page4/28 ]
No. 제목 작성자 작성일 조회수
361 제 6회 논문연구계획서 발표대회: 최성우 학생 우수상 수상 첨부파일 2010.04.28 최성우 2010.04.28 2,859
360 다이어트 운동과 AMPK와의 관계 2010.04.20 고태희 2010.04.20 4,609
359 인슐린 생산 베타세포 재생 가능 2010.04.06 김형규 2010.04.06 3,453
358 축하합니다. 김나리 선생님: 2010 국제협력연구사업 선정 2010.03.05 한진 2010.03.05 3,581
357 동맥경화 촉진 유전자 찾아냈다...이화여대 오구택 교수 2010.02.25 허혜진 2010.02.25 3,293
356 국지적 항산화단백질 조절 메커니즘 규명...국가과학자 이서구 이화여대 교수 2010.02.25 허혜진 2010.02.25 3,295
355 Prog Biophys Mol Biol논문 accept소식 2010.02.20 박원선 2010.02.20 2,662
354 Pflugers Arch논문 accept소식 2010.02.17 박원선 2010.02.17 1,912
353 장미 박사님 질병관리본부 합격 2010.02.16 박원선 2010.02.16 2,976
352 Seaons's Greetings to ALL 첨부파일 2010.01.04 한진 2010.01.04 1,663
351 안준석 제 5회 부산미래과학자상 수상자 선정 첨부파일 2009.12.02 한진 2009.12.02 4,677
350 인슐린 신호전달과 미토콘드리아 기능을 통합시키는 Foxo1 첨부파일 2009.11.24 홍다혜 2009.11.24 5,358
349 심혈관·대사질환 10대 주목 프로젝트 선정 2009.11.16 한진 2009.11.16 2,357
348 JPS논문 accept소식 2009.11.06 박원선 2009.11.06 1,724
347 Bone논문 accept소식 2009.11.05 박원선 2009.11.05 2,369
처음이전 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 다음 마지막