Tumors are highly plastic metabolic entities composed of cancer and host cells that can adopt different metabolic phenotypes. For energy production, cancer cells may use 4 main fuels that are shuttled in 5 different metabolic pathways. Glucose fuels glycolysis that can be coupled to the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle and oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) in oxidative cancer cells or to lactic fermentation in proliferating and in hypoxic cancer cells. Lipids fuel lipolysis, glutamine fuels glutaminolysis, and lactate fuels the oxidative pathway of lactate, all of which are coupled to the TCA cycle and OXPHOS for energy production. This review focuses on the latter metabolic pathway. Lactate, which is prominently produced by glycolytic cells...
<p>Pathophysiologic lactate accumulation is characteristic of solid tumors and has been associated w...
Oxygenated cancer cells have a high metabolic plasticity as they can use glucose, glutamine and lact...
A high rate of glycolysis uncoupled from oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) supports cancer cell gro...
High rate of glycolysis is a metabolic hallmark of cancer. While anaerobic glycolysis promotes energ...
Most cancer cells rely on glycolysis to sustain their high proliferation rates with the production o...
Tumors contain oxygenated and hypoxic regions, so the tumor cell population is heterogeneous. Hypoxi...
Increasing evidence indicate that lactate, the end-product of a glycolytic metabolism, promotes tumo...
Metabolic changes during malignant transformation have been noted for many years in tumours. Otto Wa...
Metabolic changes during malignant transformation have been noted for many years in tumours. Otto Wa...
Cancer development is a multistep evolutionary process. On a temporal scale, the onset of hypoxia is...
Monocarboxylate transporters (MCTs) constitute a family of 14 members among which MCT1-4 facilitate ...
Lactate, once considered a waste product of glycolysis, has emerged as a critical regulator of cance...
Abstract: Metabolic changes during malignant transformation have been noted for many years in tumour...
Abstract Background In most regions, cancer ranks the second most frequent cause of death following ...
Many cancers rely on glycolytic metabolism to fuel rapid proliferation. This has spurred interest i...
<p>Pathophysiologic lactate accumulation is characteristic of solid tumors and has been associated w...
Oxygenated cancer cells have a high metabolic plasticity as they can use glucose, glutamine and lact...
A high rate of glycolysis uncoupled from oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) supports cancer cell gro...
High rate of glycolysis is a metabolic hallmark of cancer. While anaerobic glycolysis promotes energ...
Most cancer cells rely on glycolysis to sustain their high proliferation rates with the production o...
Tumors contain oxygenated and hypoxic regions, so the tumor cell population is heterogeneous. Hypoxi...
Increasing evidence indicate that lactate, the end-product of a glycolytic metabolism, promotes tumo...
Metabolic changes during malignant transformation have been noted for many years in tumours. Otto Wa...
Metabolic changes during malignant transformation have been noted for many years in tumours. Otto Wa...
Cancer development is a multistep evolutionary process. On a temporal scale, the onset of hypoxia is...
Monocarboxylate transporters (MCTs) constitute a family of 14 members among which MCT1-4 facilitate ...
Lactate, once considered a waste product of glycolysis, has emerged as a critical regulator of cance...
Abstract: Metabolic changes during malignant transformation have been noted for many years in tumour...
Abstract Background In most regions, cancer ranks the second most frequent cause of death following ...
Many cancers rely on glycolytic metabolism to fuel rapid proliferation. This has spurred interest i...
<p>Pathophysiologic lactate accumulation is characteristic of solid tumors and has been associated w...
Oxygenated cancer cells have a high metabolic plasticity as they can use glucose, glutamine and lact...
A high rate of glycolysis uncoupled from oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) supports cancer cell gro...