Content area

Abstract

If carcinogenesis occurs by somatic evolution, then common components of the cancer phenotype result from active selection and must, therefore, confer a significant growth advantage. A near-universal property of primary and metastatic cancers is upregulation of glycolysis, resulting in increased glucose consumption, which can be observed with clinical tumour imaging. We propose that persistent metabolism of glucose to lactate even in aerobic conditions is an adaptation to intermittent hypoxia in pre-malignant lesions. However, upregulation of glycolysis leads to microenvironmental acidosis requiring evolution to phenotypes resistant to acid-induced cell toxicity. Subsequent cell populations with upregulated glycolysis and acid resistance have a powerful growth advantage, which promotes unconstrained proliferation and invasion.

Details

Title
Why do cancers have high aerobic glycolysis?
Author
Gatenby, Robert A; Gillies, Robert J
Pages
891-9
Publication year
2004
Publication date
Nov 2004
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
1474175X
e-ISSN
14741768
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
252235863
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Nov 2004