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Current Drug Metabolism

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1389-2002
ISSN (Online): 1875-5453

Glucose Addiction in Cancer Therapy: Advances and Drawbacks

Author(s): Sara Granja, Celine Pinheiro, Rui Manuel Reis, Olga Martinho and Fatima Baltazar

Volume 16, Issue 3, 2015

Page: [221 - 242] Pages: 22

DOI: 10.2174/1389200216666150602145145

Price: $65

Abstract

While normal differentiated cells primarily use mitochondrial respiration to generate the required energy for cellular processes, most cancer cells rely on glycolysis, even in sufficient oxygen conditions. This phenomenon is known as the “Warburg effect” or aerobic glycolysis and the metabolic reprogramming of cancer cells towards this altered energy metabolism is currently recognized as one of the “hallmarks of cancer”. Aerobic glycolysis underlies the rapid growth of tumor cells, with high rates of glucose consumption and lactic acid production, leading to cellular acidosis.

Metabolic reprogramming renders cancer cells dependent on specific metabolic enzymes or pathways that could be exploited in cancer therapy. The development of treatments that target tumor glucose metabolism is receiving renewed attention, with several drugs targeting metabolic pathways currently in clinical trials. The search for suitable targets, however, is limited by the high plasticity of the metabolic network that can induce compensatory routes. Deregulated glucose metabolism is a prominent feature associated with resistance to classical chemotherapy or oncogene-targeted therapies, strengthening the clinical potential of combining these therapies with glycolysis inhibitors.

The aim of this review is to compare the advances of different therapeutic strategies targeting the glucose “addiction” of tumor cells, highlighting their potential as effective weapons against cancer. We further discuss recent evidence for the involvement of glucose metabolism as a compensatory response to the use of drugs that target different signaling pathways, where the combination with glycolysis inhibitors could prove extraordinarily useful.

Keywords: Cancer metabolism, drug resistance, glucose, targeted therapy, Warburg effect.

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