Litcius/Paper detail

‘Warburg effect’ controls tumor growth, bacterial, viral infections and immunity – Genetic deconstruction and therapeutic perspectives

Jacques Pouysségur, Ibtissam Marchiq, Scott K. Parks, Jérôme Durivault, Maša Ždralević, Milica Vučetić

2022Seminars in Cancer Biology170 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The evolutionary pressure for life transitioning from extended periods of hypoxia to an increasingly oxygenated atmosphere initiated drastic selections for a variety of biochemical pathways supporting the robust life currently present on the planet. First, we discuss how fermentative glycolysis, a primitive metabolic pathway present at the emergence of life, is instrumental for the rapid growth of cancer, regenerating tissues, immune cells but also bacteria and viruses during infections. The 'Warburg effect', activated via Myc and HIF-1 in response to growth factors and hypoxia, is an essential metabolic and energetic pathway which satisfies nutritional and energetic demands required for rapid genome replication. Second, we present the key role of lactic acid, the end-product of fermentative glycolysis able to move across cell membranes in both directions via monocarboxylate transporting proteins (i.e., MCT1/4) contributing to cell-pH homeostasis but also to the complex immune response via acidosis of the tumor microenvironment. Importantly lactate is recycled in multiple organs as a major metabolic precursor of gluconeogenesis and energy source protecting cells and animals from harsh nutritional or oxygen restrictions. Third, we revisit the Warburg effect via CRISPR-Cas9 disruption of glucose-6-phosphate isomerase (GPI-KO) or lactate dehydrogenases (LDHA/B-DKO) in two aggressive tumors (melanoma B16-F10, human adenocarcinoma LS174T). Full suppression of lactic acid production reduces but does not suppress tumor growth due to reactivation of OXPHOS. In contrast, disruption of the lactic acid transporters MCT1/4 suppressed glycolysis, mTORC1, and tumor growth as a result of intracellular acidosis. Finally, we briefly discuss the current clinical developments of an MCT1 specific drug AZ3965, and the recent progress for a specific in vivo MCT4 inhibitor, two drugs of very high potential for future cancer clinical applications.

Topics & Concepts

Warburg effectGlycolysisBiologyAnaerobic glycolysisMetabolic pathwayCell biologyOxidative phosphorylationPentose phosphate pathwayLactic acidmTORC1Cancer cellImmune systemBioenergeticsLactic acidosisBiochemistryMitochondrionMetabolismCancerSignal transductionImmunologyBacteriaGeneticsPI3K/AKT/mTOR pathwayCancer, Hypoxia, and MetabolismMitochondrial Function and PathologyEpigenetics and DNA Methylation