نتایج جستجو برای: warburg effect

تعداد نتایج: 1642946  

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2011
Cen Zhang Meihua Lin Rui Wu Xiaowen Wang Bo Yang Arnold J Levine Wenwei Hu Zhaohui Feng

Regulation of energy metabolism is a novel function of p53 in tumor suppression. Parkin (PARK2), a Parkinson disease-associated gene, is a potential tumor suppressor whose expression is frequently diminished in tumors. Here Parkin was identified as a p53 target gene that is an important mediator of p53's function in regulating energy metabolism. The human and mouse Parkin genes contain function...

Journal: :Frontiers in immunology 2016
Lanbo Shi Eliseo A. Eugenin Selvakumar Subbian

Immunometabolism, the study of the relationship between bioenergetic pathways and specific functions of immune cells, has recently gained increasing appreciation. In response to infection, activation of the host innate and adaptive immune cells is accompanied by a switch in the bioenergetic pathway from oxidative phosphorylation to glycolysis, a metabolic remodeling known as the Warburg effect,...

2016
Oscar Aguilera María Muñoz-Sagastibelza Blanca Torrejón Aurea Borrero-Palacios Laura del Puerto-Nevado Javier Martínez-Useros María Rodriguez-Remirez Sandra Zazo Estela García Mario Fraga Federico Rojo Jesús García-Foncillas

KRAS mutation is often present in many hard-to-treat tumors such as colon and pancreatic cancer and it is tightly linked to serious alterations in the normal cell metabolism and clinical resistance to chemotherapy.In 1931, the winner of the Nobel Prize in Medicine, Otto Warburg, stated that cancer was primarily caused by altered metabolism interfering with energy processing in the normal cell. ...

Journal: :Prague medical report 2014
Jiří Pokorný Jan Pokorný Jitka Kobilková Anna Jandová Jan Vrba Jan Vrba

Two basic types of cancers were identified – those with the mitochondrial dysfunction in cancer cells (the Warburg effect) or in fibroblasts supplying energy rich metabolites to a cancer cell with functional mitochondria (the reverse Warburg effect). Inner membrane potential of the functional and dysfunctional mitochondria measured by fluorescent dyes (e.g. by Rhodamine 123) displays low...

Journal: :Biochemical Society transactions 2015
Stefan Schuster Daniel Boley Philip Möller Heiko Stark Christoph Kaleta

For producing ATP, tumour cells rely on glycolysis leading to lactate to about the same extent as on respiration. Thus, the ATP synthesis flux from glycolysis is considerably higher than in the corresponding healthy cells. This is known as the Warburg effect (named after German biochemist Otto H. Warburg) and also applies to striated muscle cells, activated lymphocytes, microglia, endothelial c...

2016
Quangdon Tran Hyunji Lee Jisoo Park Seon-Hwan Kim Jongsun Park

After more than half of century since the Warburg effect was described, this atypical metabolism has been standing true for almost every type of cancer, exhibiting higher glycolysis and lactate metabolism and defective mitochondrial ATP production. This phenomenon had attracted many scientists to the problem of elucidating the mechanism of, and reason for, this effect. Several models based on o...

2013
Souhila Medjkane Jonathan B Weitzman

Notable characteristics of growing tumor cells are their increased glycolytic rate and their decreased oxidative respiration, irrespective of oxygen availability. This key hallmark of cancers is known as the " Warburg effect ". 1 In the emerging field linking glucose metabolism and cancer progression, there is much debate about the causal role of the Warburg effect. It is unclear whether the Wa...

2017
Jorge S. Burns Gina Manda

Focus on the Warburg effect, initially descriptive of increased glycolysis in cancer cells, has served to illuminate mitochondrial function in many other pathologies. This review explores our current understanding of the Warburg effect's role in cancer, diabetes and ageing. We highlight how it can be regulated through a chain of oncogenic events, as a chosen response to impaired glucose metabol...

2015
Jian-Li Gao Ying-Ge Chen

In the early twentieth century, Otto Heinrich Warburg described an elevated rate of glycolysis occurring in cancer cells, even in the presence of atmospheric oxygen (the Warburg effect). Recently it became a therapeutically interesting strategy and is considered as an emerging hallmark of cancer. Hypoxia inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) is one of the key transcription factors that play major roles in...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید