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III. Cellular ultrastructures in situ as key to understanding tumor energy metabolism: biological significance of the Warburg effect

Despite the universality of metabolic pathways, malignant cells were found to have their metabolism reprogrammed to generate energy by glycolysis even under normal oxygen concentrations (the Warburg effect). Therefore, the pathway energetically 18 times less efficient than oxidative phosphorylation...

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Autores principales: Witkiewicz, Halina, Oh, Phil, Schnitzer, Jan E
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: F1000Research 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3829121/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24358890
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.2-10.v1
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author Witkiewicz, Halina
Oh, Phil
Schnitzer, Jan E
author_facet Witkiewicz, Halina
Oh, Phil
Schnitzer, Jan E
author_sort Witkiewicz, Halina
collection PubMed
description Despite the universality of metabolic pathways, malignant cells were found to have their metabolism reprogrammed to generate energy by glycolysis even under normal oxygen concentrations (the Warburg effect). Therefore, the pathway energetically 18 times less efficient than oxidative phosphorylation was implicated to match increased energy requirements of growing tumors. The paradox was explained by an abnormally high rate of glucose uptake, assuming unlimited availability of substrates for tumor growth in vivo. However, ultrastructural analysis of tumor vasculature morphogenesis showed that the growing tissue regions did not have continuous blood supply and intermittently depended on autophagy for survival. Erythrogenic autophagy, and resulting ATP generation by glycolysis, appeared critical to initiating vasculature formation where it was missing. This study focused on ultrastructural features that reflected metabolic switch from aerobic to anaerobic. Morphological differences between and within different types of cells were evident in tissue sections. In cells undergoing nucleo-cytoplasmic conversion into erythrosomes (erythrogenesis), gradual changes led to replacing mitochondria with peroxisomes, through an intermediate form connected to endoplasmic reticulum. Those findings related to the issue of peroxisome biogenesis and to the phenomenon of hemogenic endothelium. Mitochondria were compacted also during mitosis. In vivo, cells that lost and others that retained capability to use oxygen coexisted side-by-side; both types were important for vasculature morphogenesis and tissue growth. Once passable, the new vasculature segment could deliver external oxygen and nutrients. Nutritional and redox status of microenvironment had similar effect on metabolism of malignant and non-malignant cells demonstrating the necessity to maintain structure-energy equivalence in all living cells. The role of glycolysis in initiating vasculature formation, and in progression of cell cycle through mitosis, indicated that Warburg effect had a fundamental biological significance extending to non-malignant tissues. The approach used here could facilitate integration of accumulated cyber knowledge on cancer metabolism into predictive science.
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spelling pubmed-38291212013-12-05 III. Cellular ultrastructures in situ as key to understanding tumor energy metabolism: biological significance of the Warburg effect Witkiewicz, Halina Oh, Phil Schnitzer, Jan E F1000Res Research Article Despite the universality of metabolic pathways, malignant cells were found to have their metabolism reprogrammed to generate energy by glycolysis even under normal oxygen concentrations (the Warburg effect). Therefore, the pathway energetically 18 times less efficient than oxidative phosphorylation was implicated to match increased energy requirements of growing tumors. The paradox was explained by an abnormally high rate of glucose uptake, assuming unlimited availability of substrates for tumor growth in vivo. However, ultrastructural analysis of tumor vasculature morphogenesis showed that the growing tissue regions did not have continuous blood supply and intermittently depended on autophagy for survival. Erythrogenic autophagy, and resulting ATP generation by glycolysis, appeared critical to initiating vasculature formation where it was missing. This study focused on ultrastructural features that reflected metabolic switch from aerobic to anaerobic. Morphological differences between and within different types of cells were evident in tissue sections. In cells undergoing nucleo-cytoplasmic conversion into erythrosomes (erythrogenesis), gradual changes led to replacing mitochondria with peroxisomes, through an intermediate form connected to endoplasmic reticulum. Those findings related to the issue of peroxisome biogenesis and to the phenomenon of hemogenic endothelium. Mitochondria were compacted also during mitosis. In vivo, cells that lost and others that retained capability to use oxygen coexisted side-by-side; both types were important for vasculature morphogenesis and tissue growth. Once passable, the new vasculature segment could deliver external oxygen and nutrients. Nutritional and redox status of microenvironment had similar effect on metabolism of malignant and non-malignant cells demonstrating the necessity to maintain structure-energy equivalence in all living cells. The role of glycolysis in initiating vasculature formation, and in progression of cell cycle through mitosis, indicated that Warburg effect had a fundamental biological significance extending to non-malignant tissues. The approach used here could facilitate integration of accumulated cyber knowledge on cancer metabolism into predictive science. F1000Research 2013-01-10 /pmc/articles/PMC3829121/ /pubmed/24358890 http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.2-10.v1 Text en Copyright: © 2013 Witkiewicz H et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Witkiewicz, Halina
Oh, Phil
Schnitzer, Jan E
III. Cellular ultrastructures in situ as key to understanding tumor energy metabolism: biological significance of the Warburg effect
title III. Cellular ultrastructures in situ as key to understanding tumor energy metabolism: biological significance of the Warburg effect
title_full III. Cellular ultrastructures in situ as key to understanding tumor energy metabolism: biological significance of the Warburg effect
title_fullStr III. Cellular ultrastructures in situ as key to understanding tumor energy metabolism: biological significance of the Warburg effect
title_full_unstemmed III. Cellular ultrastructures in situ as key to understanding tumor energy metabolism: biological significance of the Warburg effect
title_short III. Cellular ultrastructures in situ as key to understanding tumor energy metabolism: biological significance of the Warburg effect
title_sort iii. cellular ultrastructures in situ as key to understanding tumor energy metabolism: biological significance of the warburg effect
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3829121/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24358890
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.2-10.v1
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