Cancer cells become dependent on aerobic glycolysis to sustain rapid proliferation and escape apoptosis. How this metabolic change, also known as the Warburg effect, is linked to apoptosis remains largely unknown. Our new data place c-Jun N-terminal kinase in the center of a hub regulating apoptosis and cancer metabolism
In his seminal work, Otto Warburg identified altered metabolism as integral to the high proliferatio...
Over the last decade, the field of cancer metabolism has mainly focused on studying the role of tumo...
The Warburg effect - a classical hallmark of cancer metabolism - is a counter-intuitive phenomenon i...
Cancer cells become dependent on aerobic glycolysis to sustain rapid proliferation and escape apopto...
Cancer cells become dependent on aerobic glycolysis to sustain rapid proliferation and escape apopto...
Most tumour cells use aerobic glycolysis (the Warburg effect) to support anabolic growth and evade a...
Most tumour cells use aerobic glycolysis (the Warburg effect) to support anabolic growth and evade a...
Cancer cells take more glucose to provide energy and phosphoryl intermediates for cancer progression...
The Warburg Effect, or aerobic glycolysis, is one of the major metabolic alterations observed in can...
Most tumor cells reprogram their glucose metabolism as a result of mutations in oncogenes and tumor ...
Most tumor cells reprogram their glucose metabolism as a result of mutations in oncogenes and tumor ...
It was 80 years after the Otto Warburg discovery of aerobic glycolysis, a major hallmark in the unde...
Although aerobic glycolysis (the Warburg effect) is a hallmark of cancer, key questions, including w...
AbstractCancer cells are characterized by high glycolytic rates to support energy regeneration and a...
Although aerobic glycolysis (the Warburg effect) is a hallmark of cancer, key questions, including w...
In his seminal work, Otto Warburg identified altered metabolism as integral to the high proliferatio...
Over the last decade, the field of cancer metabolism has mainly focused on studying the role of tumo...
The Warburg effect - a classical hallmark of cancer metabolism - is a counter-intuitive phenomenon i...
Cancer cells become dependent on aerobic glycolysis to sustain rapid proliferation and escape apopto...
Cancer cells become dependent on aerobic glycolysis to sustain rapid proliferation and escape apopto...
Most tumour cells use aerobic glycolysis (the Warburg effect) to support anabolic growth and evade a...
Most tumour cells use aerobic glycolysis (the Warburg effect) to support anabolic growth and evade a...
Cancer cells take more glucose to provide energy and phosphoryl intermediates for cancer progression...
The Warburg Effect, or aerobic glycolysis, is one of the major metabolic alterations observed in can...
Most tumor cells reprogram their glucose metabolism as a result of mutations in oncogenes and tumor ...
Most tumor cells reprogram their glucose metabolism as a result of mutations in oncogenes and tumor ...
It was 80 years after the Otto Warburg discovery of aerobic glycolysis, a major hallmark in the unde...
Although aerobic glycolysis (the Warburg effect) is a hallmark of cancer, key questions, including w...
AbstractCancer cells are characterized by high glycolytic rates to support energy regeneration and a...
Although aerobic glycolysis (the Warburg effect) is a hallmark of cancer, key questions, including w...
In his seminal work, Otto Warburg identified altered metabolism as integral to the high proliferatio...
Over the last decade, the field of cancer metabolism has mainly focused on studying the role of tumo...
The Warburg effect - a classical hallmark of cancer metabolism - is a counter-intuitive phenomenon i...