Previous experimental evidence indicates that some cancer cells have an alternative glycolysis pathway with net zero ATP production, implying that upregulation of glycolysis in these cells may not be related to the generation of ATP. Here we use a genome-scale model of human cell metabolism to investigate the potential metabolic alterations in cells using net zero ATP glycolysis. We uncover a novel pathway for ATP generation that involves reactions from serine biosynthesis, one-carbon metabolism and the glycine cleavage system, and show that the pathway is transcriptionally upregulated in an inducible murine model of Myc-driven liver tumorigenesis. This pathway has a predicted two-fold higher flux rate in cells using net zero ATP glycolysis...
Background Aberrant metabolism is recognized as a hallmark of cancer, a pillar necessary for cellul...
Background: The study of cancer metabolism has been largely dedicated to exploring the hypothesis th...
Cancer cells in culture obtain ATP and biosynthetic precursors primarily by aerobic glycolysis, not ...
Recent experimental evidence indicates that some cancer cells have an alternative glycolysis pathway...
Recent experimental evidence indicates that some cancer cells have an alternative glycolysis pathway...
Previous experimental evidence indicates that some cancer cells have an alternative glycolysis pathw...
Previous experimental evidence indicates that some cancer cells have an alternative glycolysis pathw...
Cancer cells exhibit high rates of glycolysis and glutaminolysis. Glycolysis can provide energy and ...
Aerobic glycolysis is a seemingly wasteful mode of ATP production that is seen both in rapidly proli...
The Warburg effect - a classical hallmark of cancer metabolism - is a counter-intuitive phenomenon i...
Cancer cells metabolize glucose by aerobic glycolysis, a phenomenon known as the Warburg effect. Fan...
Cancer cells utilize large amounts of ATP to sustain growth, relying primarily on non-o...
Cancer cells metabolize glucose by aerobic glycolysis, a phenomenon known as the Warburg effect. Fan...
A fundamental property of cancer cells is the preferential utilization of glycolysis over aerobic re...
Even in the presence of an adequate oxygen supply, many tumors metabolize the majority of the glucos...
Background Aberrant metabolism is recognized as a hallmark of cancer, a pillar necessary for cellul...
Background: The study of cancer metabolism has been largely dedicated to exploring the hypothesis th...
Cancer cells in culture obtain ATP and biosynthetic precursors primarily by aerobic glycolysis, not ...
Recent experimental evidence indicates that some cancer cells have an alternative glycolysis pathway...
Recent experimental evidence indicates that some cancer cells have an alternative glycolysis pathway...
Previous experimental evidence indicates that some cancer cells have an alternative glycolysis pathw...
Previous experimental evidence indicates that some cancer cells have an alternative glycolysis pathw...
Cancer cells exhibit high rates of glycolysis and glutaminolysis. Glycolysis can provide energy and ...
Aerobic glycolysis is a seemingly wasteful mode of ATP production that is seen both in rapidly proli...
The Warburg effect - a classical hallmark of cancer metabolism - is a counter-intuitive phenomenon i...
Cancer cells metabolize glucose by aerobic glycolysis, a phenomenon known as the Warburg effect. Fan...
Cancer cells utilize large amounts of ATP to sustain growth, relying primarily on non-o...
Cancer cells metabolize glucose by aerobic glycolysis, a phenomenon known as the Warburg effect. Fan...
A fundamental property of cancer cells is the preferential utilization of glycolysis over aerobic re...
Even in the presence of an adequate oxygen supply, many tumors metabolize the majority of the glucos...
Background Aberrant metabolism is recognized as a hallmark of cancer, a pillar necessary for cellul...
Background: The study of cancer metabolism has been largely dedicated to exploring the hypothesis th...
Cancer cells in culture obtain ATP and biosynthetic precursors primarily by aerobic glycolysis, not ...