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Metabolic alterations in renal cell carcinoma
- Publication Year :
- 2015
-
Abstract
- Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is a metabolic disease, being characterized by the dysregulation of metabolic pathways involved in oxygen sensing (VHL/HIF pathway alterations and the subsequent up-regulation of HIF-responsive genes such as VEGF, PDGF, EGF, and glucose transporters GLUT1 and GLUT4, which justify the RCC reliance on aerobic glycolysis), energy sensing (fumarate hydratase-deficient, succinate dehydrogenase-deficient RCC, mutations of HGF/MET pathway resulting in the metabolic Warburg shift marked by RCC increased dependence on aerobic glycolysis and the pentose phosphate shunt, augmented lipogenesis, and reduced AMPK and Krebs cycle activity) and/or nutrient sensing cascade (deregulation of AMPK-TSC1/2-mTOR and PI3K-Akt-mTOR pathways). We analyzed the key metabolic abnormalities underlying RCC carcinogenesis, highlighting those altered pathways that may represent potential targets for the development of more effective therapeutic strategies.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Nutrient sensing
Biology
Pentose phosphate pathway
urologic and male genital diseases
medicine.disease_cause
Internal medicine
medicine
Animals
Humans
Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging
RCC carcinogenesis
Carcinoma, Renal Cell
AMPK
General Medicine
Kidney Neoplasms
female genital diseases and pregnancy complications
Renal cell carcinoma
Citric acid cycle
Metabolic pathway
Endocrinology
Oncology
Anaerobic glycolysis
Metabolic pathways
Lipogenesis
Therapeutic strategies
Cancer research
Carcinogenesis
Metabolic Networks and Pathways
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....4cdd1e21143890f77c6a123221e59ba4