Increased anaerobic glycolysis is a common feature of many cancer cells, which have adapted their metabolism to maximize glucose incorporation and catabolism to generate ATP and substrates for biosynthetic reactions. This phenomenon is known as the “Warburg effect”. Indeed, glycolysis allows a more rapid production of ATP compared to oxidative phosphorylation, and provides metabolic intermediates required for the high proliferation of cancer cells. Moreover, it makes cancer cells less sensitive to fluctuations of oxygen levels, a condition usually occurring in a newly established tumor environment. Indeed, blood vessels do not penetrate deeply into the core of a solid tumor, limiting, other than oxygen, nutrients supply. Here, we provide ev...
AbstractThe Warburg effect is known to be crucial for cancer cells to acquire energy. Nutrient defic...
Advances in our understanding of tumor biology achieved in the past decade have convincingly reveale...
Background: Cancer cells favor the use of less efficient glycolysis rather than mitochondrial oxidat...
Increased anaerobic glycolysis is a common feature of many cancer cells, which have adapted their me...
Increased glycolytic flux is a common feature of many cancer cells, which have adapted their metabol...
Cancer cells often rely on glycolysis to obtain energy and support anabolic growth. Several studies ...
<div><p>Cancer cells often rely on glycolysis to obtain energy and support anabolic growth. Several ...
Metabolic reprogramming has become recognized as a hallmark of cancer. One of the earliest discoveri...
Adequate responses to environmental stresses are essential for cell survival. The regulation of cell...
peer reviewedCancer cells often rely on glycolysis to obtain energy and support anabolic growth. Sev...
AbstractTumor cells grow in nutrient- and oxygen-deprived microenvironments and adapt to the subopti...
Background/Aims: Previous studies have shown that p38MAPK is involved in gastric cancer, yet the und...
Cells need a constant supply of energy to maintain bioenergetic and survival. Upregulation of aerobi...
Compared with normal differentiated cells, cancer cells take up much more glucose and metabolize it ...
The control of cell metabolism is intimately linked to the size and shape of mitochondria, which var...
AbstractThe Warburg effect is known to be crucial for cancer cells to acquire energy. Nutrient defic...
Advances in our understanding of tumor biology achieved in the past decade have convincingly reveale...
Background: Cancer cells favor the use of less efficient glycolysis rather than mitochondrial oxidat...
Increased anaerobic glycolysis is a common feature of many cancer cells, which have adapted their me...
Increased glycolytic flux is a common feature of many cancer cells, which have adapted their metabol...
Cancer cells often rely on glycolysis to obtain energy and support anabolic growth. Several studies ...
<div><p>Cancer cells often rely on glycolysis to obtain energy and support anabolic growth. Several ...
Metabolic reprogramming has become recognized as a hallmark of cancer. One of the earliest discoveri...
Adequate responses to environmental stresses are essential for cell survival. The regulation of cell...
peer reviewedCancer cells often rely on glycolysis to obtain energy and support anabolic growth. Sev...
AbstractTumor cells grow in nutrient- and oxygen-deprived microenvironments and adapt to the subopti...
Background/Aims: Previous studies have shown that p38MAPK is involved in gastric cancer, yet the und...
Cells need a constant supply of energy to maintain bioenergetic and survival. Upregulation of aerobi...
Compared with normal differentiated cells, cancer cells take up much more glucose and metabolize it ...
The control of cell metabolism is intimately linked to the size and shape of mitochondria, which var...
AbstractThe Warburg effect is known to be crucial for cancer cells to acquire energy. Nutrient defic...
Advances in our understanding of tumor biology achieved in the past decade have convincingly reveale...
Background: Cancer cells favor the use of less efficient glycolysis rather than mitochondrial oxidat...