Cancer Metabolism Flashcards
Why do cancer cells alter their metabolism?
For rapid growth and proliferation. Cancer cells often need to survive in environments that are less than optimal for their needs, so they adapt their metabolism to get enough materials and energy
What are the requirements for cancer cells?
Cancer cells grow and divide rapidly, so the demand for “building blocks” is high
What are “building blocks” and what do they each lead to?
Amino acids -> proteins
Lipids -> Membranes and fuel
Nucleotides -> DNA and RNA
Carbohydrates -> Fuel, Energy, Structural
Why is altered metabolism recognised as an emerging hallmark?
The fact that cancer cells adapt their metabolism to cope with their growth demands is regarded as generic across multiple different cancer type, thereby making it an emerging hallmark of cancer
Why do cancer cells become genetically reprogrammed, leading to improved cellular fitness?
To provide a select advantage during tumorigenesis
To support cell survival in stressful conditions
To allow pathologically elevated proliferation and growth levels
What are the 3 main types of alterations that occur in cancer cell metabolism?
Increased bioenergetics
Increased biosynthesis
Altered redox balance
Outline aerobic respiration in normal cells
Glucose broken down in glycolysis in cytoplasm to 2X Pyruvate (+2ATP +2NADH), which is used in TCA cycle to create 3NADH and 1FADH2 (+1ATP +2CO2).
What are the functions of HIF-1a in mammalian cells?
All mammalian cells have mechanisms to detect and monitor ambient O2 levels (eg HIF-1a TF). This TF upregulates over 60 genes including VEGF for angiogenesis and erythropoetin for rbc production to encourage O2 delivery to hypoxic regions. Also, it induces cell survival gene transcription, as well as glucose and iron metabolism. HIF-1a activation also leads to increased glycolysis (and glucose consumption)
How do tumour cells adapt to hypoxia?
Tumour cells activate HIF-1a, increasing their glucose consumption via glycolysis. Glycolysis doesn’t require O2, so cells can produce energy rapidly with no need for O2. This turns glucose into lactate, producing ATP and NADH. Lactate is released from the cells via HIF-1a regulated genes
How does the lower extracellular pH surrounding tumour cells benefit them?
Tumour cells have lower extracellular pH because of the lactate they export. It’s advantageous for tumour cell survival because it inhibits cytotoxic T lymphocytes, allowing the cancer to evade the immune system. It also activates enzymes that degrade the surrounding local tissue to allow for invasion. Low pH also makes the local environment less favourable to normal cells
How else can glycolysis in cancer cells be upregulated?
Oncogene activation can drive forward glycolysis in cancer cells, eg. Myc activation upregulates glucose uptake genes. PI3K/AKT pathway can stimulate glycolysis.
What is the Warburg effect?
The phenomenon where tumour cells are observed to have increased glucose uptake compared to surrounding tissues and the glucose was fermented to lactate, even in the presence of O2. This is termed aerobic glycolysis (Warburg effect)
What are the benefits of cancer cells performing aerobic glycolysis?
It allows cancer cells to survive in environments where the O2 conditions vary greatly. Glycolysis also results in rapid production of ATP and NAPDH, which suits the cancer cell’s rapid growth and proliferation
What is the important of biomolecules in cancer?
Biomolecules are extremely important for cancer cells as they need them for rapid prolif etc. Carbon is the primary element in lipids, sugars, proteins, etc. The high proportion of glucose broken down by cancer cells results in a carbon rich pool of cellular intermediates. These are building blocks for biomolecules
What is the importance of biosynthesis in cancer cells?
Anabolic reactions require energy and NADH as a reducing agent. Biosynthetic needs are greatly increased in cancer cells due to their rapid growth and proliferation