Metabolic reprogramming in glioblastoma: the influence of cancer metabolism on epigenetics and unanswered questions |
| |
Authors: | Sameer Agnihotri Gelareh Zadeh |
| |
Affiliation: | MacFeeters-Hamilton Brain Tumor Centre, Toronto, Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, University Health Network, Toronto, Canada (S.A., G.Z.); Department of Neurosurgery, Toronto Western Hospital, University Health Network, Toronto, Canada (G.Z) |
| |
Abstract: | A defining hallmark of glioblastoma is altered tumor metabolism. The metabolic shift towards aerobic glycolysis with reprogramming of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation, regardless of oxygen availability, is a phenomenon known as the Warburg effect. In addition to the Warburg effect, glioblastoma tumor cells also utilize the tricarboxylic acid cycle/oxidative phosphorylation in a different capacity than normal tissue. Altered metabolic enzymes and their metabolites are oncogenic and not simply a product of tumor proliferation. Here we highlight the advantages of why tumor cells, including glioblastoma cells, require metabolic reprogramming and how tumor metabolism can converge on tumor epigenetics and unanswered questions in the field. |
| |
Keywords: | epigenetics metabolic reprogramming molecular signaling Warburg effect |
|
|