Carcinogenesis. 2014 Mar; 35(3): 515–527.
Published online 2013 Dec 16. doi: 10.1093/carcin/bgt480
PMCID: PMC3941741
PMID: 24343361
Cancer as a metabolic disease: implications for novel therapeutics
This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.
Abstract
Emerging
evidence indicates that cancer is primarily a metabolic disease
involving disturbances in
energy production through respiration and
fermentation. The genomic instability observed in tumor cells and all
other recognized hallmarks of cancer are considered downstream
epiphenomena of the initial disturbance of cellular energy metabolism.
The disturbances in tumor cell energy metabolism can be linked to
abnormalities in the structure and function of the mitochondria. When
viewed as a mitochondrial metabolic disease, the evolutionary theory of
Lamarck can better explain cancer progression than can the evolutionary
theory of Darwin. Cancer growth and progression can be managed following
a whole body transition from fermentable metabolites, primarily glucose
and glutamine, to respiratory metabolites, primarily ketone bodies. As
each individual is a unique metabolic entity, personalization of
metabolic therapy as a broad-based cancer treatment strategy will
require fine-tuning to match the therapy to an individual’s unique
physiology.Introduction
Cancer
is a disease involving multiple time- and space-dependent changes in
the health status of cells and tissues that ultimately lead to malignant
tumors. Neoplasia (abnormal cell growth) is the biological endpoint of
the disease. Tumor cell invasion into surrounding tissues and their
spread (metastasis) to distant organs is the primary cause of morbidity
and mortality of most cancer patients (1–5).
A major impediment in the effort to control cancer has been due in
large part to the confusion surrounding the origin of the disease.
Contradictions and paradoxes continue to plague the field (6–10).
Much of the confusion surrounding cancer origin arises from the absence
of a unifying theory that can integrate the many diverse observations
on the nature of the disease. Without a clear understanding of how
cancer arises, it becomes difficult to formulate a successful strategy
for effective long-term management and prevention. The failure to
clearly define the origin of cancer is responsible in large part for the
failure to significantly reduce the death rate from the disease (2). Although cancer metabolism is receiving increased attention, cancer is generally considered a genetic disease (10,11). This general view is now under serious reevaluation (2,12). The information in this review comes in part from our previous articles and treatise on the subject (2,13–17).
Provocative question: does cancer arise from somatic mutations?
Most
of those who conduct academic research on cancer would consider it a
type of somatic genetic disease where damage to a cell’s nuclear DNA
underlies the transformation of a normal cell into a potentially lethal
cancer cell (7,10,11,18).
Abnormalities in dominantly expressed oncogenes and in recessively
expressed tumor suppressor genes have been the dogma driving the field
for several decades (7,10).
The discovery of millions of gene changes in different cancers has led
to the perception that cancer is not a single disease, but is a
collection of many different diseases (6,11,19,20).
Consideration of cancer as a ‘disease complex’ rather than as a single
disease has contributed to the notion that management of the various
forms of the disease will require individual or ‘personalized’ drug
therapies (2,21–23). Tailored therapies, unique to the genomic defects within individual tumors, are viewed as the future of cancer therapeutics (2,24).
This therapeutic strategy would certainly be logical if the nuclear
somatic mutations detected in tumors were the drivers of the disease.
How certain are we that tumors arise from somatic mutations and that
some of these mutations drive the disease? It would therefore be
important to revisit the origin of the gene theory of cancer.
The
gene theory of cancer originated with Theodor Boveri’s suggestion in
1914 that cancer could arise from defects in the segregation of
chromosomes during cell division (18,25–29).
As chromosomal instability in the form of aneuploidy (extra
chromosomes, missing chromosomes or broken chromosomes) is present in
many tumor tissues (21,30–32),
it was logical to extend these observations to somatic mutations within
individual genes including oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes (18,33–36).
Boveri’s hypothesis on the role of chromosomes in the origin of
malignancy was based primarily on his observations of chromosome
behavior in nematodes (Ascaris) and sea urchins (Paracentrotus) and from his consideration of von Hansemann’s earlier observations of abnormal chromosome behavior in tumors (18,25,29).
In contrast to Boveri’s view of aneuploidy as the origin of cancer, von
Hansemann considered the abnormal chromosome behavior in tumors as an
effect rather than as a cause of the disease (25).
Although Boveri’s hypothesis emerged as the foundation for the somatic
mutation theory of cancer, it appears that he never directly
experimented on the disease (18,25,29).
The reason for the near universal acceptance of Boveri’s hypothesis for
the origin of cancer is not clear but might have been linked to his
monumental achievement in showing that Gregor Mendel’s abstract heredity
factors resided on chromosomes (29).
Boveri’s cancer theory was also consistent with the gradual
accumulation of evidence showing that DNA abnormalities are abundant in
cancer cells.
In his 2002 review,
Knudson stated that, ‘considerable evidence has been amassed in support
of Boveri’s early hypothesis that cancer is a somatic genetic disease’ (37).
The seeds of the somatic mutation theory of cancer might have been
sowed even before the work of von Hansemann and Boveri. Virchow
considered that cancer cells arose from other cancer cells (38).
Robert Wagner provided a good overview of those early studies leading
to the idea that somatic mutations give rise to cancer (38).
It gradually became clear that almost every kind of genomic defect
could be found in tumor cells whether or not the mutations were
connected to carcinogenesis (10,11,18,26,31).
The current somatic mutation theory involves a genomic landscape of
incomprehensible complexity that also includes mysterious genomic ‘Dark
Matter’ (2,10,11,19).
Although massive evidence exists showing that genomic instability is
present to some degree in all tumor cells, it is unclear how this
phenotype relates to the origin of the disease. It appears that almost
every neoplastic cell within a naturally arising human tumor is
heterogeneous in containing a unique genetic architecture (31).
Inconsistencies with a nuclear gene origin of cancer
The distinguished British geneticist, C.D.Darlington (39),
was one of the first to raise concerns regarding the nuclear genetic
origin of cancer. Based on several inconsistencies in the association of
mutagens with cancer, Darlington argued persuasively that nuclear
genomic defects could not be the origin of cancer. Rather, he was
convinced that cancer cells arose from defects in cytoplasmic elements,
which he referred to as ‘plasmagenes’. Although Darlington did not
specifically characterize the nature of the plasmagene, several
characteristics of the plasmagenes suggested that they were
mitochondria. It was unclear, however, if the radiation damage to the
plasmagenes acted alone in causing cancer or also acted in conjunction
with mutations in nuclear genes.
Inconsistencies
regarding the somatic nuclear gene theory of cancer also come from
nuclear/cytoplasmic transfer experiments between tumorigenic and
non-tumorigenic cells. Several investigators showed that tumorigenicity
is suppressed when cytoplasm from non-tumorigenic cells, containing
normal mitochondria, is combined with nuclei from tumor cells (40–44). Moreover, the in vivo
tumorigenicity of multiple human and animal tumor types is suppressed
when the nucleus from the tumor cell is introduced into the cytoplasm of
a non-tumorigenic cell (45–48).
Tumors generally did not form despite the continued presence of the
tumor-associated mutations. The nuclear gene mutations documented in
mouse brain tumors and melanomas were also detected in the normal
embryonic tissues of the mice derived from the tumor nuclei (47,48).
Some embryos derived from tumor nuclei, which contained major
chromosomal imbalances, proceeded through early development forming
normal appearing tissues before dying. Despite the presence of
tumor-associated aneuploidy and somatic mutations, tumors did not
develop from these tumor-derived nuclei (49). Boveri also found that sea urchin embryos with chromosomal imbalances developed normally to gastrulation but then aborted (25,29). Hochedlinger et al. (48)
showed that nuclei derived from melanoma cells were unable to direct
complete mouse development due presumably to the chromosomal imbalances
and irreversible tumor-associated mutations in the melanoma nucleus.
Tumors did not arise in the embryos derived from the melanoma nuclei.
These findings suggest that the nuclear genomic defects in these tumor
cells have more to do with directing development than with causing
tumors.
More recent mitochondrial transfer experiments support the general findings of the nuclear transfer experiments (50,51).
The tumorigenic phenotype is suppressed when normal mitochondria are
transferred to the tumor cell cytoplasm. On the other hand, the
tumorigenic phenotype is enhanced when tumor mitochondria are
transferred to a normal cell cytoplasm. These findings further suggest
that tumorigenesis is dependent more on mitochondrial function than on
the types of mutations in the nucleus.
In
contrast to the suppressive effects of normal mitochondria on
tumorigenicity, tumorigenicity is enhanced when nuclei of
non-tumorigenic cells are combined with cytoplasm from tumor cells (52,53).
These observations are consistent with the original view of Darlington
that tumor cells arise from defects in the cytoplasm rather than from
defects in the nucleus (39). Wallace et al. (53)
also showed that introduction of mitochondrial DNA mutations into
non-tumorigenic cybrids could reverse the anti-tumorigenic effect of
normal mitochondria leading to the conclusion that cancer can be best
defined as a type of mitochondrial disease. The nuclear transfer studies
are summarized in Figure 1,
highlighting the role of the mitochondria in suppressing tumorigenesis.
These studies also raise questions regarding the role of somatic
mutations as drivers of tumorigenesis. Further studies will be needed to
determine whether tumors arise from defects in the nuclear genome alone
or in the mitochondria alone, or require defects in both the
mitochondria and the nuclear genome. Such studies will provide evidence
for or against the nuclear gene driver hypothesis of cancer initiation.
Role
of the nucleus and mitochondria in the origin of tumors. This image
summarizes the experimental evidence supporting a dominant role of the
mitochondria in the origin of tumorigenesis as described previously (49).
Normal cells are depicted in green with mitochondrial and nuclear
morphology indicative of normal respiration and nuclear gene expression,
respectively. Tumor cells are depicted in red with abnormal
mitochondrial and nuclear morphology indicative of abnormal respiration
and genomic instability. (1) Normal cells beget normal cells. (2) Tumor
cells beget tumor cells. (3) Delivery of a tumor cell nucleus into a
normal cell cytoplasm begets normal cells despite the persistence of
tumor-associated genomic abnormalities. (4) Delivery of a normal cell
nucleus into a tumor cell cytoplasm begets tumor cells or dead cells but
not normal cells. The results suggest that tumors do not arise from
nuclear genomic defects alone and that normal mitochondria can suppress
tumorigenesis. Original diagram from Jeffrey Ling and Thomas N.
Seyfried, with permission.
Respiratory insufficiency as the origin of cancer and the ‘Warburg effect’
Otto Warburg (54,55) first proposed that all cancers originate from dysfunctional cellular respiration. Warburg stated,
Just as there are many remote causes of plague, heat, insects, rats, but only one common cause, the plague bacillus, there are a great many remote causes of cancer-tar, rays, arsenic, pressure, urethane- but there is only one common cause into which all other causes of cancer merge, the irreversible injuring of respiration.
The
key points of Warburg’s theory are (i) insufficient respiration
initiates tumorigenesis and ultimately cancer, (ii) energy through
glycolysis gradually compensates for insufficient energy through
respiration, (iii) cancer cells continue to ferment lactate in the
presence of oxygen and (iv) respiratory insufficiency eventually becomes
irreversible (54–58). Efraim Racker (59)
was the first to describe the increased aerobic glycolysis seen in
cancer cells as the ‘Warburg effect’. Warburg, however, referred to the
phenomenon in cancer cells as ‘aerobic fermentation’ to highlight the
abnormal production of lactate in the presence of oxygen (54–58). As lactate production is widely recognized as an indicator of respiratory insufficiency in biological systems (60), Warburg also viewed the aerobic production of lactate in tumor cells as an indicator of respiratory insufficiency.
A deficiency in oxidative phosphorylation (OxPhos) energy is responsible for lactate production in most cases (61,62).
For example, muscle cells significantly increase their metabolic rate
during intense exercise and as a result oxygen becomes limiting. The
oxygen deficiency causes a lack of energy through OxPhos prompting
lactate production in an effort to provide compensatory energy from
fermentation (glycolytic energy) (60).
A competing argument would be that OxPhos is not insufficient during
intense exercise and that aerobic fermentation is needed to provide more
energy and growth metabolites in response to the increased work demand.
This would be similar to the suggestion of Weinhouse and others for the
increased aerobic glycolysis in tumor cells (63,64). Indeed, Kopennol et al. (64)
suggest that the increased lactate production in tumor cells arises
from damage to the regulation of glycolysis and not to insufficient
respiration. However, the competing argument is inconsistent with the
observation that the lactate made by muscle cells during intense
exercise falls significantly after oxygen is restored to the muscle
tissue. This would indicate that the lactate was made primarily because O2 was unavailable for robust OxPhos (65). In addition, oxygen deprivation or hypoxia causes all known cultured mammalian cells to increase lactate production (66–68).
An increase in lactate is also seen in adequately oxygenated cells when
respiration is inhibited either by respiratory poisons or null
mutations in key respiratory enzymes (69–71).
It is therefore clear from established bioenergetic principles that the
excess lactate made by most mammalian cells is needed to sustain
fermentation energy in order to compensate for insufficient energy from
respiration. It is our view that tumor cells are not an exception to
this general principle and that their lactate production results in part
from insufficient respiratory activity. It is expected that an
upregulation of glycolytic genes would be needed to facilitate
compensatory energy production through glycolysis when cellular
respiration is deficient for protracted periods (56). The reduction of pyruvate to lactate is needed to enhance the glycolytic pathway when respiration becomes insufficient.
It
is important to recognize that pyruvate is produced through aerobic
glycolysis in most normal cells of the body that use glucose for energy.
The reduction of pyruvate to lactate distinguishes the tumor cells from
most normal cells, which fully oxidize pyruvate to CO2 and
water for adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production through the
tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle and the electron transport chain (56).
Aerobic glycolysis with lactate production can occur in normal retina
though more ATP is produced through respiration than through glycolysis,
as is the case in most respiring tissues (72).
On the other hand, enhanced aerobic glycolysis without significant
lactate production or energy through fermentation can occur in normal
cardiac and brain tissues under conditions of increased activity (73–75).
The slight transient increase in lactate production under these
conditions is not associated with a significant increase in total energy
production. As enhanced aerobic glycolysis does not produce significant
lactate in normal cells under well-oxygenated conditions, a phenotype
of enhanced aerobic glycolysis is therefore not synonymous with a
Warburg effect.
Lactate will be produced in normal
tissues under low oxygen conditions. Tumor cells also produce lactate
under hypoxia through anaerobic glycolysis. Although many investigators
of tumor cell energy metabolism use the term ‘aerobic glycolysis’ in
referring to the Warburg effect, we consider the term ‘aerobic
fermentation’ as a more accurate description of the Warburg effect since
aerobic glycolysis occurs in most normal cells of the body. A key issue
is whether the lactate produced in tumor cells under aerobic conditions
results from insufficient respiration as Warburg proposed or is due to
some other phenomenon. The origin of the Warburg effect is an issue of
controversy that persists today despite Warburg’s data showing that it
arose from insufficient respiration.
According to
Warburg and Burk respiratory insufficiency together with lactate
production are the key features of tumor cell energy metabolism (55,57,76,77).
Respiratory insufficiency as the origin of tumorigenesis has remained
controversial, however, due to observations of high oxygen consumption
rates in many tumor cells (63,64,78–82).
It is generally assumed that oxygen consumption rate is a good
indicator of cellular respiration and OxPhos. Although low oxygen
consumption rate seen together with high lactate production can be
indicative of insufficient respiration, high oxygen consumption might
not be indicative of sufficient respiration especially if lactate is
also produced. It is now recognized from numerous studies that oxygen
consumption rates are not always linked to a normally coupled oxidative
phosphorylation (83–86).
It can be difficult to determine the degree to which mitochondrial ATP
production arises from coupled respiration or from TCA cycle substrate
level phosphorylation (87–90). The origin of mitochondrial ATP production in tumor cells requires further clarification in light of these issues.
Mitochondrial
structure is intimately connected to mitochondrial function. This fact
cannot be overemphasized. We have reviewed substantial evidence of
morphological, proteomic, and lipidomic abnormalities in mitochondria of
numerous types of cancer cells (17,85,91).
Tumor cells can have abnormalities in both the content and composition
of their mitochondria. The work of Arismendi-Morillo and Oudard et al.
showed that the ultrastructure of tumor tissue mitochondria differs
markedly from the ultrastructure of normal tissue mitochondria (17,92–94).
In contrast to normal mitochondria, which contain numerous cristae,
mitochondria from tumor tissue samples showed swelling with partial or
total cristolysis (Figure 2).
Cristae contain the proteins of the respiratory complexes and play an
essential structural role in facilitating energy production through
OxPhos (95). The structural defects in human glioma mitochondria are also consistent with lipid biochemical defects in murine gliomas (96,97).
Typical
ultrastructure of a normal mitochondrion and a mitochondrion from a
human glioblastoma. Normal mitochondria contain elaborate cristae, which
are extensions of the inner membrane and contain the protein complexes
of the electron transport chain necessary for producing ATP through
OxPhos. The mitochondrion from the glioblastoma (m) is enlarged and
shows a near total breakdown of cristae (cristolysis) and an
electron-lucent matrix. The absence of cristae in glioblastoma
mitochondria indicates that OxPhos would be deficient. The arrow
indicates an inner membrane fold. Bar: 0.33 μm. Method of staining:
uranyl acetate/lead citrate. The glioblastoma multiforme mitochondrion
was reprinted with permission from Journal of Electron Microscopy (94). The normal mitochondrion diagram was from http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/biology/bio4fv/page/mito.htm.
More recent electron micrographic studies from Elliott et al. showed that mitochondria ultrastructure was abnormal to some degree in 778 patients with breast cancer (51).
Remarkably, mitochondria were severely reduced in number or were
undetectable in the tumor tissue from over 80% of the patients. These
findings together with the evidence from the Pedersen (67) review would support Warburg’s central hypothesis that respiration is insufficient in tumor cells. It
is obvious that mitochondrial function or OxPhos sufficiency cannot be
normal in tumor cells that contain few if any mitochondria.
Glycolysis and lactate fermentation would need to be upregulated in
these tumor cells in order to compensate for the absence of OxPhos.
Furthermore, the degree of malignancy in these breast tumors was
correlated directly with the degree of mitochondrial structural
abnormality (51).
The high glycolytic activity and lactate production seen in the most
malignant tumors were also linked to the mitochondrial structural
abnormalities seen in the tumors (91,98–102).
In contrast to inherited mitochondriopathies, where glycolysis might
not compensate completely for mitochondrial energy failure, fermentation
energy appears capable of compensating completely for the respiratory
insufficiency in tumor cells (18,103).
Further studies will be needed to distinguish the differences in
glycolytic and respiratory energy metabolism in tumor cells and in cells
with mitochondriopathies (18).
Pedersen (67)
presented massive evidence showing that mitochondria in tumor cells are
abnormal compared with mitochondria from normal cells. His review
provides a comprehensive discussion of mitochondrial bioenergetics and
dysfunction in cancer cells. It was clearly shown that the mitochondria
of cancer cells contain numerous qualitative and quantitative
abnormalities compared with mitochondria from tissue specific control
cells. Summarized here are just a few of the conclusions from the
Pedersen review. (i) Tumor mitochondria are abnormal in morphology and
ultrastructure and respond differently to changes in growth media than
mitochondria from normal cells. (ii) The protein and lipid composition
of tumor mitochondria are markedly different from that of normal
mitochondria. (iii) Proton leak and uncoupling is greater in tumor
mitochondria than in normal mitochondria. (iv) Calcium regulation is
impaired in tumor mitochondria. (v) Anion membrane transport systems are
abnormal or dysregulated in mitochondria from many tumors. (vi)
Defective shuttle systems are not responsible for elevated glucose
fermentation in tumor cells. (vii) Pyruvate is not effectively oxidized
in tumor mitochondria. (viii) Tumor mitochondria contain a
surface-bound, fetal-like hexokinase. (ix) A deficiency in some aspect
of respiration can account for excessive lactic acid production in tumor
cells. Clearly, substantial evidence exists showing that mitochondrial
structure, function and respiratory capacity is defective to some degree
in all types of tumor cells. This information should be addressed in
discussions of tumor cell energy metabolism.
Besides
a generalized defect at the level of the mitochondrial electron
transport chain in most tumor cells, numerous other mitochondrial
abnormalities do exist that would diminish respiratory function (104,105).
Interestingly, Warburg never stated that a generalized defect in
electron transport was responsible for the origin of cancer despite
suggestions from others (106,107). Rather, Warburg stated that insufficient respiration was responsible for aerobic fermentation and the origin of cancer (54,55,57,58,82). We know from the work of numerous investigators that electron transport may not be coupled to ATP synthesis in cancer cells (91,104).
Any mitochondrial defect that would uncouple electron transport from
OxPhos could reduce respiratory sufficiency and thus contribute to
lactate formation or a Warburg effect.
Influence of unnatural growth environment on cellular energy metabolism
Much
of the evidence arguing against Warburg’s central theory that
respiratory insufficiency is the origin of the aerobic fermentation seen
in cancer cells (Warburg effect) was derived from investigations of
tumor cells grown in vitro (64,78,79,108–110).
In contrast to the structural defects, reduced numbers or the absence
of mitochondria observed in human cancerous tissues, such mitochondrial
abnormalities are not generally seen in many human and animal tumor
cells when they are grown in the in vitro environment. It is
interesting that oxygen consumption rate can be similar or even greater
in cultured tumor cells than in non-tumorigenic cells (83,86,111). The presence of mitochondria and robust oxygen consumption rates in tumor cells grown in vitro suggested to some that mitochondria are normal in tumor cells and that Warburg’s central theory was incorrect (64,81,109).
As mentioned above, however, oxygen consumption rate is not always an
indicator of coupled respiration. Some tumor cells consume oxygen while
importing and hydrolyzing glycolytically derived ATP through the
mitochondrial adenine nucleotide transporter 2 in order to maintain the
proton motive gradient (112).
We also showed that the growth of tumorigenic and non-tumorigenic cells
in typical cell culture media changes the content and fatty acid
composition of lipids especially cardiolipin, the signature phospholipid
of the inner mitochondrial membrane that regulates OxPhos (96). No tumor cells have yet been described with a normal content and composition of cardiolipin (97,113,114). Cells cannot respire effectively if the content or composition of their cardiolipin is abnormal (97,115,116). This point cannot be overemphasized.
It
is not clear why mitochondria might appear functionally normal in many
types of cultured tumor cells but appear structurally abnormal when
evaluated in the tumor cells of many primary malignant cancers. Cultured
cell lines are usually derived from only a single cell or a few cells
of a heterogeneous tumor. Is it possible that only those tumor cells with some level of mitochondrial function are capable of growing in vitro? Also the in vitro
environment forces many cells into a state of aerobic fermentation
whether or not they are tumorigenic. We showed that the typical culture
environment produces immature cardiolipin in non-tumorigenic glial
cells, which reduces the activity of mitochondrial respiratory chain
complexes (96). Further studies are needed on the structure and function of mitochondria in tumor tissue and their derived cell lines.
Lactate
production should be minimal in adequately oxygenated cells that have
the capacity to respire normally. However, significant lactate
production is often observed in proliferating non-tumorigenic cells
grown in well-oxygenated cultures (96,103,117).
It is not likely that the high aerobic fermentation seen in normal
cells grown in culture is due to deregulated glycolysis, as suggested
for tumor cells (64).
Enhanced glycolysis in tumor cells cannot be considered only as
deregulated but can also be considered as necessary to compensate for
respiratory insufficiency.
Some investigators consider lactate production as necessary for normal cell proliferation (118,119).
It is important to consider the differences in the metabolic
requirements of tumorigenic and non-tumorigenic cells when grown in the in vivo and in vitro environments (117,120).
In contrast to what is seen in cultured cells, no lactate production is
seen in the rapidly growing embryonic chorion under aerobic conditions (57). Moreover, lactate production is minimal in rapidly growing hepatocytes during liver regeneration (121,122).
Instead, regenerating liver cells use fatty acids rather than glucose
to fuel proliferation. Fatty acid metabolism produces mostly water and
CO2, but not lactate. In contrast to hepatomas, which have
abnormal cardiolipin composition, the content and composition of
cardiolipin is similar in resting liver cells and in proliferating liver
cells during regeneration (123,124).
These findings suggest that respiration can occur normally in rapidly
proliferating liver cells during liver regeneration. Viewed together,
these findings indicate that lactate production is not required for
rapid cell proliferation in vivo. Tumor cells are an exception
in this regard, as lactate production in these cells arises as a
consequence of abnormal respiration, which can be linked to either the
structural defects seen in tumor tissue mitochondria or to reduced
number of mitochondria. If lactate production is not required for rapid
cell growth, why are significant amounts of lactate produced in many
types of rapidly growing tumorigenic and non-tumorigenic cells when
grown in culture?
The ‘Crabtree effect’ can confound
the interpretation of energy metabolism in cultured cells. The Crabtree
effect involves a glucose-induced suppression of respiration leading to
lactate production whether or not mitochondria are damaged (96,120,125,126).
The Crabtree effect differs from the Warburg effect, which involves
lactate production arising from insufficient respiration. In other
words, the aerobic lactate produced under the Crabtree effect arises
from a suppressed respiration rather than from insufficient respiration
as occurs in the Warburg effect. It can be difficult to determine with
certainty, however, whether the aerobic fermentation (aerobic
glycolysis) observed in cultured cells arises from a Crabtree effect, a
Warburg effect or some combination of these effects (126–128). We consider the Crabtree effect as an artifact of the in vitro
environment that causes some non-tumorigenic mammalian cells to ferment
lactate even in the presence of oxygen. It would therefore be important
for investigators to exclude the influence of a Crabtree effect on the
assessment of energy measurements in cultured cells. Although a Crabtree
effect might suppress OxPhos, the TCA cycle should remain functional
and produce ATP through substrate level phosphorylation (87–90). Under certain conditions (hypoxia), the tumor TCA cycle can work in both forward and reverse (reductive) directions (129,130).
Although some tumor cells can have a functional TCA cycle linked to
insufficient respiration, sufficient respiration is unlikely to occur
without a functional TCA cycle. Support for this comes from findings
that some rare cancers can arise from inherited mutations in TCA
enzymes, e.g. fumarate hydratase and succinate dehydrogenase, which
impede the TCA cycle (131,132).
Based on the data presented over many years by numerous investigators,
we consider that OxPhos is universally insufficient to some degree in
all tumor cells. However, the Crabtree effect and the unnatural
conditions of the in vitro environment can obscure this
insufficiency. Although respiratory insufficiency might be more profound
in some tumor cells than in others, most if not all tumor cells will
express some degree of OxPhos insufficiency compared with appropriate
controls matched for species, age and tissue type.
Besides the confounding influence of the in vitro
environment on energy metabolism, abnormalities and misinformation can
be obtained when human tumor cells are grown in non-syngeneic hosts (133).
This is especially relevant with respect to the mouse xenograft models
including the ‘patient-derived xenografts’. We found that human U87MG
brain cancer cells express mouse carbohydrates on their surface when
grown as a xenograft in immune deficient mice (134). Over 65% of the sialic acid composition on the U87MG tumor cells consisted of the nine-carbon sugar, N-glycolylneuraminic acid. Humans, however, are unable to synthesize N-glycolylneuraminic acid due to a mutation in the gene that encodes a common mammalian hydroxylase enzyme (134,135). The hydroxylase mutation occurred in the human genome sometime after our evolutionary split with the great apes (135).
The acquisition of murine carbohydrates and lipids will likely occur in
any human tumor cell grown in the body of a mouse or rat. N-glycolylneuraminic acid alters the characteristics of human embryonic stem cells when grown on non-human feeder cells (136).
The influence of the murine host on gene expression in human tumor
cells is a confounding variable that can create difficulties for data
interpretation in tumor cells. Few investigators address these issues.
Expression
of mouse carbohydrates and lipids on human tumor cells when grown as
xenografts can alter gene expression patterns and growth behavior of the
tumor cells, thus altering their response to changes in the
microenvironment. It might be reasonable to view the human xenograft
tumor models as a type of human-mouse centaur (133). In addition, the basal metabolic rate of the mouse is 7- to 8-fold greater than that of humans (137,138).
The basal metabolic rate is the energy needed for the maintenance of
all physiological processes under rest. Little attention is given to
differences in metabolic rate when comparing metabolism among human and
animal tumors (117).
The difference in metabolic rate could cause the human tumor cells to
grow slow or not at all in xenografts due to competition for energy
metabolites with mouse host stromal cells that have a higher metabolic
rate than the human tumor cells. This could account in part for the low
incidence of systemic metastasis seen in xenograft models implanted with
tumor cells taken from human metastases. Solid tumors that do not
metastasize or are not invasive are generally considered benign (4).
Further studies will be needed to determine if the human tumor cells
that are selected to grow in the mouse have a metabolic rate more
similar to that of the mouse than to that of the human.
Many human tumor cells or tissues are grown in mice that are Non-Obese Diabetic and have Severely Compromised Immuno-Deficiency (NOD-SCID) (139).
These mice not only have a compromised innate and/or adaptive immune
system but also express characteristics of both type-1 diabetes and
type-2 diabetes (140).
This is not a usual situation for most cancer patients. Despite some
limited success, it is naive to assume that the growth behavior and
response to therapies of human tumors grown as xenografts would be
similar to the situation in the natural host. The evaluation of cancer
drugs against tumor cells grown in unnatural environments together with
the misunderstanding on the origin of cancer is responsible in large
part for widespread failure in developing new cancer therapies (133).
The use of syngeneic mouse tumor models will be more representative of
the natural physiological state in humans than will the xenograft
models.
Connecting the links from respiratory insufficiency to cancer origin
The path from normal cell physiology to malignant behavior, where all major cancer hallmarks are expressed, is depicted in Figure 3.
Any unspecific condition that damages a cell’s respiratory capacity but
is not severe enough to kill the cell can potentially initiate the path
to a malignant cancer. Reduced respiratory capacity could arise from
damage to any mitochondrial protein, lipid or mtDNA. Some of the many
unspecific conditions that can diminish a cell’s respiratory capacity
thus initiating carcinogenesis include inflammation, carcinogens,
radiation (ionizing or ultraviolet), intermittent hypoxia, rare germline
mutations, viral infections and age. The evidence supporting this
statement also addresses Szent Giorgy’s ‘oncogenic paradox’, as was
described in a recent treatise on the subject (141).
The paradox addresses the difficulty in knowing how a plethora of
disparate carcinogenic agents might produce cancer through a common
mechanism. Some of the rare germline mutations that increase risk for
cancer through an effect on cellular respiration include p53, BRACA1, RB and xeroderma pigmentosum (18). Cancer-causing viruses can be linked to mitochondrial dysfunction (18).
If respiratory damage is acute, the cell will die. On the other hand,
if damage is mild and protracted, the cell will elevate lactate or amino
acid fermentation in order to compensate for insufficient OxPhos.
Recent evidence also shows that mitochondrial dysfunction is the initial
event in the path to tumorigenesis induced by the mutated Ras oncogene and is closely linked to the action of the BRAF oncogene (83,142,143). Cells will enter their default state of proliferation following loss of respiratory control (9,141). Several cancer hallmarks can be linked to the transition from quiescence to proliferation (Figure 3).
Unbridled proliferation is linked to fermentation, which was the
dominant form of energy metabolism during the oxygen deficient α period
of earth’s history (144).
OxPhos insufficiency in fusion hybrids between immune cells (mostly
macrophages) and cancer stem cells can underlie the ability of tumor
cells to intravasate the circulation locally and to extravasate the
circulation at distant sites (145,146).
As macrophages are already mesenchymal and naturally capable of
systemic tissue dispersion, it is not necessary to explain the
phenomenon of metastasis in terms of complicated gene-linked epithelial
to mesenchymal and mesenchymal to epithelial transitions. Metastasis in
our view would arise from the dysregulation of normal macrophage
functions in fusion hybrids including intravasation and extravasation (146–148).
All major hallmarks of cancer including genomic instability can be
linked directly or indirectly to the respiratory dysfunction and the
compensatory fermentation of the tumor cell.
Mitochondrial
respiratory dysfunction as the origin of cancer. Cancer can arise from
any number of non-specific events that damage the respiratory capacity
of cells over time. The path to carcinogenesis will occur only in those
cells capable of enhancing energy production through fermentation
(substrate level phosphorylation, SLP). Despite the shift from
respiration to SLP the ΔG′ of ATP hydrolysis remains fairly constant at
approximately −56 kJ indicating that the energy from SLP compensates for
the reduced energy from OxPhos. The mitochondrial stress response or
retrograde signaling will initiate oncogene upregulation and tumor
suppressor gene inactivation that are necessary to maintain viability of
incipient cancer cells when respiration becomes unable to maintain
energy homeostasis. Genomic instability will arise as a secondary
consequence of protracted mitochondrial stress from disturbances in the
intracellular and extracellular microenvironment. Metastasis arises from
respiratory damage in cells of myeloid/macrophage origin (146).
The degree of malignancy is linked directly to the energy transition
from OxPhos to SLP. This scenario links all major cancer hallmarks to an
extrachromosomal respiratory dysfunction (141). The T
signifies an arbitrary threshold when the shift from OxPhos to SLP
might become irreversible. Reprinted with modifications from (17).
Are mutations in the P53 and the Ras genes primary or secondary causes of cancer?
Although germline or somatic mutations in the P53 tumor suppressor gene and somatic mutations the Ras oncogene occur frequently in many tumor cells and cancers (149,150), it is not clear if these genes or their products are primary or secondary causes of cancer. Hwang et al. showed that p53 regulates mitochondrial respiration through its transcriptional target gene Synthesis of Cytochrome c Oxidase 2 (SCO2) (151–153). In these studies the Warburg effect was linked directly to impaired respiration. Singh et al. showed that mitochondrial energy metabolism is impaired in human cancer cells containing defects in p53 (154). Huang et al. recently showed that the common K-RasG12V mutation causes a metabolic switch from OxPhos to glycolysis (Warburg effect) due to mitochondrial dysfunction (Figure 4). Lee et al. showed that transfection of human diploid cells with V12Ras significantly increased damaging oxygen species in mitochondria (155), whereas Weinberg et al. (156)
showed that mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation and
damage to complex III was essential for K-Ras-induced cell proliferation
and tumorigenesis. Moreover, Yang et al. (157)
showed that H-Ras transformation of mouse fibroblasts damaged
respiration, thus forcing the cells into a glycolytic metabolism. This
is notable since activated RAS has been proposed to induce MYC activity
and to enhance non-hypoxic levels of HIF-1α (64).
As MYC and HIF-1 drive glycolysis, their upregulation would be
necessary to prevent senescence following respiratory impairment (18,158). As constitutive Ras
activation is incompatible with prenatal development, a disruption of
mitochondrial energy metabolism could underlie tumor formation in mice
cloned from melanoma nuclei following the inadvertent expression of the Ras oncogene (48). Viewed collectively, these and other observations are consistent with Warburg’s theory and suggest that mutations in the P53 and Ras
genes initiate cancer through their adverse effects on respiratory
function. It will be up to each investigator to determine whether they
consider these mutations as primary or secondary causes of cancer
according to Warburg’s central theory (55,57,58). It is our view that all roads to the origin and progression of cancer pass through the mitochondria (Figure 3).
Timeline of events following expression of K-Ras. The time axis depicts the various events after stimulation of the K-RAS gene expression. The findings of Huang et al. indicate that mitochondria-linked changes are observed around the time of the increase in the K-Ras protein (142).
This is then followed by other changes, such as alteration in cell
metabolism. Gene mutations would form as a downstream epiphenomenon of
altered metabolism. Malignant transformation, documented by the
colony-forming activity of the cells and their propensity to form tumors
ensue much later. According to these findings, the Warburg effect
(aerobic fermentation) arises as a consequence of K-RAS-induced
respiratory injury. This timeline is in general agreement with
Warburg’s central theory and with other similar findings that
respiratory disturbance is an initial event in K-RAS-induced tumorigenesis (237–239). The timeline will be greatly protracted in vivo as shown from the Roskelley et al. (240) experiments. Reprinted from Neuzil et al. (143) with permission.
Can tumor somatic mutations arise as a downstream epiphenomenon of abnormal energy metabolism?
How might protracted respiratory insufficiency cause somatic mutations and the nuclear genomic instability seen in tumor cells? The integrity of the nuclear genome is dependent to a large extent on the efficiency of mitochondrial respiratory function (159).
Evidence indicates that a persistent retrograde response or
mitochondrial stress response leads to abnormalities in DNA repair
mechanisms and to the upregulation of fermentation pathways (50,160–164). Oncogene upregulation becomes essential for increased glucose and glutamine metabolism following respiratory impairment (83,165).
The metabolic waste products of fermentation can destabilize the
morphogenetic field of the tumor microenvironment thus contributing to
inflammation, angiogenesis and progression (166–168).
Normal mitochondrial function is necessary for maintaining
intracellular calcium homeostasis, which is required for chromosomal
integrity and the fidelity of cell division. Aneuploidy can arise during
cell division from abnormalities in calcium homeostasis (159).
In this general picture, the abnormal genomic landscape seen in tumor
cells is considered a downstream epiphenomenon of dysfunctional
respiration and protracted oncogene-driven fermentation. In other words,
the somatic mutations arise as effects rather than as causes of
tumorigenesis. The nuclear transfer experiments support this view (Figure 1).
In light of this perspective, it would be important for those working
in cancer genomics field to justify the logic of their experimental
approach to the cancer problem (169,170).
Cancer progression is more consistent with Lamarckian than Darwinian evolution
When
viewed as a mitochondrial metabolic disease cancer progression is more
in line with the evolutionary theory of Lamarck than with the theory of
Darwin (20).
Many investigators in the cancer field have attempted to link the
Darwinian theory of evolution to the phenomenon of tumor progression (171–174).
The attempt to link cancer progression to Darwinian evolution is based
largely on the view that nuclear somatic mutations are drivers of the
disease. According to Lamarck’s theory, it is the environment that
produces changes in biological structures (175).
Through adaptation and differential use, these changes lead to
modifications in the structures. The modifications of structures would
then be passed on to successive generations as acquired traits.
Lamarck’s evolutionary synthesis was based on his belief that the degree
of use or disuse of biological structures shaped evolution along with
the inheritance of acquired adaptability. Lamarck’s ideas could also
accommodate a dominant role for epigenetics and horizontal gene transfer
as factors that could facilitate tumor progression (176,177).
In addition to nuclear epigenetic events involving acetylation and
phosphorylations, mitochondria are also recognized as a powerful extra
nuclear epigenetic system (159,178–180).
Other epigenetic phenomena such as cytomegalovirus infection, cell
fusion and horizontal gene transfer can also contribute to cancer
progression and metastasis (147,159,181–184).
Considering
the dynamic behavior of mitochondria involving regular fusions and
fissions, abnormalities in mitochondrial structure can be rapidly
disseminated throughout the cellular mitochondrial network and passed
along to daughter cells somatically, through cytoplasmic inheritance (17,185).
The capacity for mitochondrial respiratory function becomes
progressively less with each cell division as adaptability to substrate
level phosphorylation increases (Figure 3).
The somatic progression of cancer would therefore embody the concept of
the somatic inheritance of an acquired trait. The acquired trait in
this case is alteration to mitochondrial structure. The most malignant
cancer cells would sustain the near-complete replacement of their
respiration with fermentation. This is obvious in those tumor cells with
quantitative and qualitative abnormalities in their mitochondria (Figure 2).
The somatic inheritance of mitochondrial dysfunction in tumor cells
could contribute in part to the appearance of a clonal origin, but not
directly involving the nuclear genome. However, the degree of nuclear
genomic instability can be linked to mitochondrial dysfunction and both
defects together can contribute to tumor progression. A Lamarckian view
can account for the non-uniform accumulation of mutations and drug
resistance seen during cancer progression. Drug resistance is linked to
enhanced lactate fermentation, which is acquired during tumor
progression (61,186).
It is our opinion that the evolutionary concepts of Lamarck can better
explain the phenomena of tumor progression than can the evolutionary
concepts of Darwin. We encourage further research on this perspective of
tumor progression.
Exploiting mitochondrial dysfunction for the metabolic management of cancer
If
cancer is primarily a disease of energy metabolism, then rational
strategies for cancer management should be found in those therapies that
specifically target tumor cell energy metabolism. These therapeutic
strategies should be applicable to the majority of cancers regardless of
tissue origin, as nearly all cancers suffer from a common malady, i.e.
insufficient respiration with compensatory fermentation (2,54,55,57).
As glucose is the major fuel for tumor energy metabolism through
lactate fermentation, the restriction of glucose becomes a prime target
for management. However, most normal cells of the body also need
glycolytic pathway products, such as pyruvate, for energy production
through OxPhos. It therefore becomes important to protect normal cells
from drugs or therapies that disrupt glycolytic pathways or cause
systemic reduction of glucose. It is well known that ketones can replace
glucose as an energy metabolite and can protect the brain from severe
hypoglycemia (187–189).
Hence, the shift in energy metabolism associated with a low
carbohydrate, high-fat ketogenic diet administered in restricted amounts
(KD-R) can protect normal cells from glycolytic inhibition and the
brain from hypoglycemia.
When systemic glucose
availability becomes limiting, most normal cells of the body will
transition their energy metabolism to fats and ketone bodies. Ketone
bodies are generated almost exclusively in liver hepatocytes largely
from fatty acids of triglyceride origin during periods of fasting (187,190).
There are no metabolic pathways described that can produce ketone
bodies from carbohydrates despite suggestions to the contrary (191).
A restriction of total caloric intake will facilitate a reduction in
blood glucose and insulin levels and an elevation in ketone bodies
(β-hydroxybutyrate and acetoacetate). Most tumor cells are unable to use
ketone bodies for energy due to abnormalities in mitochondria structure
or function (13,192). Ketone bodies can also be toxic to some cancer cells (193,194). Nutritional ketosis induces metabolic stress on tumor tissue that is selectively vulnerable to glucose deprivation (13).
Hence, metabolic stress will be greater in tumor cells than in normal
cells when the whole body is transitioned away from glucose and to
ketone bodies for energy.
The metabolic shift
from glucose metabolism to ketone body metabolism creates an
anti-angiogenic, anti-inflammatory and pro-apoptotic environment within
the tumor mass (192,195–199).
The general concept of a survival advantage of tumor cells over normal
cells occurs when fermentable fuels are abundant, but not when they are
limited (20). Figure 5
illustrates the changes in whole body levels of blood glucose and
ketone bodies (β-hydroxybutyrate) that will metabolically stress tumor
cells while enhancing the metabolic efficiency of normal cells. This
therapeutic strategy was illustrated previously in cancer patients and
in preclinical models (200–205).
Relationship
of circulating levels of glucose and ketones (β-hydroxybutyrate) to
tumor management. The glucose and ketone values are within normal
physiological ranges under fasting conditions in humans and will produce
anti-angiogenic, anti-inflammatory and pro-apoptotic effects. We refer
to this state as the zone of metabolic management. Metabolic stress will
be greater in tumor cells than in normal cells when the whole body
enters the metabolic zone. The values for blood glucose in mg/dl can be
estimated by multiplying the mM values by 18. The glucose and ketone
levels predicted for tumor management in human cancer patients are
3.1–3.8mM (55–65mg/dl) and 2.5–7.0mM, respectively. These ketone levels
are well below the levels associated with ketoacidosis (blood ketone
values greater than 15 mmol). Elevated ketones will protect the brain
from hypoglycemia. Modified from a previous version (241).
Implications for novel therapeutics
Once the whole body enters the metabolic zone described in Figure 5, relatively low doses of a variety of drugs can be used to further target energy metabolism in any surviving tumor cells (192).
It is interesting that the therapeutic success of imatinib (Gleevec)
and trastuzumab (Herceptin) in managing BCR-ABL leukemia cells and
ErbB2-positive breast cancers, respectively, is dependent on their
ability to target signaling pathways linked to glucose metabolism (206,207).
In contrast to these drugs, which target energy metabolism primarily in
those individuals with mutations in specific receptors linked to the
IGF-1/PI3K/Akt pathway, calorie-restricted KDs will target similar
pathways in any cancer cell regardless of the mutations involved (197,208).
Dietary energy reduction will simultaneously target multiple metabolic
signaling pathways without causing adverse effects or toxicity (208).
Non-toxic metabolic therapies might also be a preferable alternative to
toxic immunotherapies for cancer management especially if both
therapies target the same pathways. It must be emphasized that the
therapeutic efficacy of the KD is strongly dependent on restricted
intake, as consumption of the KD in unrestricted amounts can cause
insulin insensitivity and glucose elevation despite the complete absence
of carbohydrates in the diet (205).
Elevated consumption of the KD is not often seen, however, as humans
usually restrict intake due to the high fat content of the diet.
Poff et al. also recently showed a synergistic interaction between the KD and hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBO2T) (Figure 6).
The KD reduces glucose for glycolytic energy while also reducing NADPH
levels for anti-oxidant potential through the pentose-phosphate pathway.
HBO2T will increase ROS in the tumor cells, whereas the
ketones will protect normal cells against ROS damage and from the
potential for central nervous system oxygen toxicity (189,209).
Glucose deprivation will enhance oxidative stress in tumor cells,
whereas increased oxygen can reduce tumor cell proliferation (210,211).
A dependency on glucose and an inability to use ketones for energy
makes tumor cells selectively vulnerable to this therapy. Although this
metabolic therapy is effective against those tumor cells that contain
mitochondria, it remains to be determined if this therapy would be
equally effective against those tumor cells containing few or no
mitochondria (51). In contrast to radiation therapy, which also kills tumor cells through ROS production (212), the KD + HBO2T
will kill tumor cells without causing toxic collateral damage to normal
cells. Cancer patients and their oncologists should know about this.
Some KDs might also enhance the therapeutic action of radiation therapy
against brain and lung tumors (213,214). It will be important to compare and contrast the therapeutic efficacy of conventional radiation therapy with HBO2T
when used with the KD-R. Although radiation is widely used as a cancer
therapy, it should be recognized that radiation damages respiration in
normal cells and can itself cause cancer (55).
Radiation therapy for malignant brain cancer creates a necrotic
microenvironment that can facilitate recurrence and progression through
enhanced glucose and glutamine metabolism (13,215).
The KD and HBO2T
are synergistic in reducing systemic metastatic cancer in the syngeneic
VM mouse model. VM-M3/Fluc tumor cells were implanted subcutaneously
and systemic organ metastasis was evaluated ex vivo using bioluminescent imaging as described previously (242,243).
Tumor growth was slower in mice fed the KD than in mice fed a standard
high carbohydrate diet. (A) Representative animals from each treatment
group demonstrating tumor bioluminescence at day 21 after tumor cell
inoculation. Treated animals showed less bioluminescence than controls
with KD + HBO2T mice exhibiting a profound decrease in tumor
bioluminescence compared with all groups. (B) Total body bioluminescence
was measured weekly as a measure of tumor size; error bars represent
standard error of the mean. KD + HBO2T mice exhibited significantly less tumor bioluminescence than control animals at week 3 (P < 0.01; two-tailed student’s t-test)
and an overall trend of notably slower tumor growth than controls and
other treated animals throughout the study. (C and D) Day 21 organ
bioluminescence of standard high carbohydrate diet and KD + HBO2T animals (N
= 8) demonstrated a trend of reduced metastatic tumor burden in animals
receiving the combined therapy. Spleen bioluminescence was
significantly decreased in KD + HBO2T mice (*P < 0.02; two-tailed student’s t-test). Reprinted with permission from Poff et al. (243).
Besides
drugs that target glucose, drugs that target glutamine can also be
effective in killing systemic metastatic cancer cells (192,216,217). Many metastatic cancers express multiple characteristics of macrophages (146,218). Glutamine is a major fuel of macrophages and other cells of the immune system (146,219).
As glutamine is the most abundant amino acid in the body and is used in
multiple metabolic reactions, targeting glutamine without toxicity
might be more difficult than targeting glucose (220,221).
Although glutamine interacts synergistically with glucose to drive
energy metabolism in cultured tumor cells, there are reports suggesting
that glutamine can have chemo-preventive effects (222). Further studies are needed to evaluate the role of glutamine as a facilitator of tumor energy metabolism in vivo.
The novelty of the metabolic approach to cancer
management involves the implementation of a synergistic combination of
nutritional ketosis, cancer metabolic drugs and HBO2T. This
therapeutic approach would be similar to the ‘Press-Pulse’ scenario for
the mass extinction of organisms in ecological communities (223,224). The KD-R would act as a sustained ‘Press’, whereas HBO2T
and metabolic drugs would act as a ‘Pulse’ for the mass elimination of
tumor cells in the body. Some of the cancer metabolic drugs could
include 2-deoxyglucose, 3-bromopyruvate and dichloroacetate (56,120,225–227).
This therapeutic strategy produces a shift in metabolic physiology that
will not only kill tumor cells but also enhance the general health and
metabolic efficiency of normal cells, and consequently the whole body (189,209). We view this therapeutic approach as a type of ‘mitochondrial enhancement therapy’ (192).
As we consider OxPhos insufficiency with compensatory fermentation as
the origin of cancer, enhanced OxPhos efficiency would be
anti-carcinogenic.
Many cancers are infected with human cytomegalovirus, which acts as an oncomodulator of tumor progression (228).
Products of the virus can damage mitochondria in the infected tumor
cells, thus contributing to a further dependence on glucose and
glutamine for energy metabolism (18,229–231). The virus often infects cells of monocyte/macrophage origin, which are considered the origin of many metastatic cancers (145,146,232,233).
We predict that the KD-R used together with anti-viral therapy will
also be an effective Press-Pulse strategy for reducing progression of
those cancers infected with human cytomegalovirus (234).
Advanced
metastatic cancers can become manageable when their access to
fermentable fuels becomes restricted. The metabolic shift associated
with the KD-R involves ‘keto-adaptation’. However, the adaptation to
this new metabolic state can be challenging for some people. The
administration of ketone esters could conceivably enable patients to
circumvent the dietary restriction generally required for sustained
nutritional ketosis. Ketone ester-induced ketosis would make sustained
hypoglycemia more tolerable and thus assist in metabolic management of
cancer (235,236).
As each person is a unique metabolic entity, personalization of
metabolic therapy as a broad-based cancer treatment strategy will
require fine-tuning based on an understanding of individual human
physiology. Also, personalized molecular therapies developed through the
genome projects could be useful in targeting and killing those tumor
cells that might survive the non-toxic whole body metabolic therapy. The
number of molecular targets should be less in a few survivor cells of a
small tumor than in a heterogeneous cell population of a large tumor.
We would therefore consider personalized molecular therapy as a final
strategy rather than as an initial strategy for cancer management.
Non-toxic metabolic therapy should become the future of cancer treatment
if the goal is to manage the disease without harming the patient.
Although it will be important for researchers to elucidate the
mechanistic minutia responsible for the therapeutic benefits, this
should not impede an immediate application of this therapeutic strategy
for cancer management or prevention.
Funding
National Institutes of Health (HD-39722;, NS-55195;, CA-102135);
American Institute of Cancer Research; the Boston College Expense Fund
(to T.N.S.); Scivation and Office of Naval Research (to D.P.D.).
Acknowledgements
We thank Miriam Kalamian for helpful comments.
Conflict of Interest Statement: None declared.
Glossary
Abbreviations:
| ATP | adenosine triphosphate |
| HBO2T | hyperbaric oxygen therapy |
| KD | ketogenic diet |
| OxPhos | oxidative phosphorylation |
| ROS | reactive oxygen species |
| SLP | substrate level phosphorylation |
| TCA | tricarboxylic acid. |
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