MYC-Induced Cancer Cell Energy Metabolism and Therapeutic Opportunities
Johns Hopkins University · Johns Hopkins Medicine
Abstract
Although cancers have altered glucose metabolism, termed the Warburg effect, which describes the increased uptake and conversion of glucose to lactate by cancer cells under adequate oxygen tension, changes in the metabolism of glutamine and fatty acid have also been documented. The MYC oncogene, which contributes to the genesis of many human cancers, encodes a transcription factor c-Myc, which links altered cellular metabolism to tumorigenesis. c-Myc regulates genes involved in the biogenesis of ribosomes and mitochondria, and regulation of glucose and glutamine metabolism. With E2F1, c-Myc induces genes involved in nucleotide metabolism and DNA replication, and microRNAs that homeostatically attenuate E2F1…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 14.11
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 67
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Warburg effect
- Glutaminolysis
- Ectopic expression
- Cancer cell
- Lactate dehydrogenase A
- Carcinogenesis
- Glutamine