Catabolic efficiency of aerobic glycolysis: The Warburg effect revisited

Alexei Vazquez, Jiangxia Liu, Yi Zhou, Zoltán N. Oltvai

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

226 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Cancer cells simultaneously exhibit glycolysis with lactate secretion and mitochondrial respiration even in the presence of oxygen, a phenomenon known as the Warburg effect. The maintenance of this mixed metabolic phenotype is seemingly counterintuitive given that aerobic glycolysis is far less efficient in terms of ATP yield per moles of glucose than mitochondrial respiration.Results: Here, we resolve this apparent contradiction by expanding the notion of metabolic efficiency. We study a reduced flux balance model of ATP production that is constrained by the glucose uptake capacity and by the solvent capacity of the cell's cytoplasm, the latter quantifying the maximum amount of macromolecules that can occupy the intracellular space. At low glucose uptake rates we find that mitochondrial respiration is indeed the most efficient pathway for ATP generation. Above a threshold glucose uptake rate, however, a gradual activation of aerobic glycolysis and slight decrease of mitochondrial respiration results in the highest rate of ATP production.Conclusions: Our analyses indicate that the Warburg effect is a favorable catabolic state for all rapidly proliferating mammalian cells with high glucose uptake capacity. It arises because while aerobic glycolysis is less efficient than mitochondrial respiration in terms of ATP yield per glucose uptake, it is more efficient in terms of the required solvent capacity. These results may have direct relevance to chemotherapeutic strategies attempting to target cancer metabolism.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number58
JournalBMC Systems Biology
Volume4
DOIs
StatePublished - May 6 2010
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
AV was sponsored by the RWJ Foundation, Project title: "Strengthening the Cancer Institute of New Jersey in Cancer Prevention, Control and Population Science to Improve Cancer Care", Cancer Informatics Category. This work has been supported in part by NIH grants NIAID U01 AI070499 to ZNO.

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