Aerobic glycolysis is a seemingly wasteful mode of ATP production that is seen both in rapidly proliferating mammalian cells and highly active contracting muscles, but whether there is a common origin for its presence in these widely different systems is unknown. To study this issue, here we develop a model of human central metabolism that incorporates a solvent capacity constraint of metabolic enzymes and mitochondria, accounting for their occupied volume densities, while assuming glucose and/or fatty acid utilization. The model demonstrates that activation of aerobic glycolysis is favored above a threshold metabolic rate in both rapidly proliferating cells and heavily contracting muscles, because it provides higher ATP yield per volume de...
Although all brain cells bear in principle a comparable potential in terms of energetics, in reality...
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...
Aerobic glycolysis is a seemingly wasteful mode of ATP production that is seen both in rapidly proli...
Aerobic glycolysis is a seemingly wasteful mode of ATP production that is seen both in rapidly proli...
Aerobic glycolysis is a seemingly wasteful mode of ATP production that is seen both in rapidly proli...
Aerobic glycolysis is a seemingly wasteful mode of ATP production that is seen both in rapidly proli...
The Warburg effect, or aerobic glycolysis, is marked by the increased metabolism of glucose to lacta...
Cancer cells utilize large amounts of ATP to sustain growth, relying primarily on non-o...
Cellular bioenergetics requires an intense ATP turnover that is increased further by hypermetabolic ...
The Warburg effect - a classical hallmark of cancer metabolism - is a counter-intuitive phenomenon i...
Cancer cells share several metabolic traits, including aerobic production of lactate from glucose (W...
In contrast to normal differentiated cells, which rely primarily on mitochondrial oxidative phosphor...
Cell metabolism is characterized by three fundamental energy demands: to sustain cell maintenance, t...
Cancer cells share several metabolic traits, including aerobic production of lactate from glucose (W...
Although all brain cells bear in principle a comparable potential in terms of energetics, in reality...
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...
Aerobic glycolysis is a seemingly wasteful mode of ATP production that is seen both in rapidly proli...
Aerobic glycolysis is a seemingly wasteful mode of ATP production that is seen both in rapidly proli...
Aerobic glycolysis is a seemingly wasteful mode of ATP production that is seen both in rapidly proli...
Aerobic glycolysis is a seemingly wasteful mode of ATP production that is seen both in rapidly proli...
The Warburg effect, or aerobic glycolysis, is marked by the increased metabolism of glucose to lacta...
Cancer cells utilize large amounts of ATP to sustain growth, relying primarily on non-o...
Cellular bioenergetics requires an intense ATP turnover that is increased further by hypermetabolic ...
The Warburg effect - a classical hallmark of cancer metabolism - is a counter-intuitive phenomenon i...
Cancer cells share several metabolic traits, including aerobic production of lactate from glucose (W...
In contrast to normal differentiated cells, which rely primarily on mitochondrial oxidative phosphor...
Cell metabolism is characterized by three fundamental energy demands: to sustain cell maintenance, t...
Cancer cells share several metabolic traits, including aerobic production of lactate from glucose (W...
Although all brain cells bear in principle a comparable potential in terms of energetics, in reality...
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...