reviewInternational Journal of Radiation BiologyMar 1, 2019Closed access

The Warburg effect: essential part of metabolic reprogramming and central contributor to cancer progression

Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz · University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz

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Abstract

In the early 1920s, Warburg published experimental data on the enhanced conversion of glucose to pyruvate (followed by lactate formation) even in the presence of abundant oxygen (aerobic glycolysis, Warburg effect). He attributed this metabolic trait to a respiratory injury and considered this a universal metabolic alteration in carcinogenesis. This interpretation of the data was questioned since the early 1950s. Realistic causative mechanisms and consequences of the Warburg effect were described only during the past 15 years and are summarized in this article. There is clear evidence that mitochondria are not defective in most cancers. Aerobic glycolysis, a key metabolic feature of the Warburg phenotype, is…

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