Compared to normal cells, many tumor cells have to subsist in a hypoxic intratumoral environment that has an unstable supply of oxygen and nutrients including glucose. How tumor cells may survive the metabolic stress arising from tumor hypoxia is not yet fully understood. Recent studies revealed that tumor cells are able to accumulate large quantities of intracellular glycogen. Whether glycogen would serve as fuel reserve in hypoxic tumor cells is presently not clear. This question is being addressed in this study. When HeLa, HT29, HEK293 and HepG2 cells were incubated under hypoxic condition in the absence of glucose, the steady state intracellular glycogen level dropped by more than 50% in 3 hours. The specific pharmacological inhibiti...
Selective therapeutic targeting of tumors requires identification of differences between the homeost...
Cancer cells require a steady source of metabolic energy in order to continue their uncontrolled gro...
Solid tumors contend with, and adapt to, a hostile micro-environment that includes limited availabil...
Poster presentation - Theme 2: Cancer & other diseasesGlycogen has been recently implicated as a maj...
Conference Theme: Cancer and metabolismPoster Presentation: P37BACKGROUND: Metabolic reprogramming i...
Metabolic reprogramming of cancer cells provides energy and multiple intermediates critical for cell...
SummaryMetabolic reprogramming of cancer cells provides energy and multiple intermediates critical f...
Glycogen, the highly-branched polymer of glucose, has been hypothesised to act as the major fuel res...
International audienceThe hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1), in addition to genetic and epigenetic ...
Channelling of glucose via glycogen, known as the glycogen shunt, may play an important role in the ...
Normal Glycolytic Enzyme Activity is Critical for Hypoxia Inducible Factor-1α Activity and Provides ...
Glycogen is known to act as a fuel reserve in organs such as skeletal muscle and liver. Glycogen is ...
Glycogen metabolism operates as an alternative energy source, enabling cell growth under conditions ...
In breast cancer, tumor hypoxia has been linked to poor prognosis and increased metastasis. Hypoxia ...
Metabolic reprogramming in cancer cells provides energy and important metabolites required to sustai...
Selective therapeutic targeting of tumors requires identification of differences between the homeost...
Cancer cells require a steady source of metabolic energy in order to continue their uncontrolled gro...
Solid tumors contend with, and adapt to, a hostile micro-environment that includes limited availabil...
Poster presentation - Theme 2: Cancer & other diseasesGlycogen has been recently implicated as a maj...
Conference Theme: Cancer and metabolismPoster Presentation: P37BACKGROUND: Metabolic reprogramming i...
Metabolic reprogramming of cancer cells provides energy and multiple intermediates critical for cell...
SummaryMetabolic reprogramming of cancer cells provides energy and multiple intermediates critical f...
Glycogen, the highly-branched polymer of glucose, has been hypothesised to act as the major fuel res...
International audienceThe hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1), in addition to genetic and epigenetic ...
Channelling of glucose via glycogen, known as the glycogen shunt, may play an important role in the ...
Normal Glycolytic Enzyme Activity is Critical for Hypoxia Inducible Factor-1α Activity and Provides ...
Glycogen is known to act as a fuel reserve in organs such as skeletal muscle and liver. Glycogen is ...
Glycogen metabolism operates as an alternative energy source, enabling cell growth under conditions ...
In breast cancer, tumor hypoxia has been linked to poor prognosis and increased metastasis. Hypoxia ...
Metabolic reprogramming in cancer cells provides energy and important metabolites required to sustai...
Selective therapeutic targeting of tumors requires identification of differences between the homeost...
Cancer cells require a steady source of metabolic energy in order to continue their uncontrolled gro...
Solid tumors contend with, and adapt to, a hostile micro-environment that includes limited availabil...