IMBECU   20882
INSTITUTO DE MEDICINA Y BIOLOGIA EXPERIMENTAL DE CUYO
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Circadian and Non-Circadian Melatonin: Influence on Glucose Metabolism in Cancer Cells.
Autor/es:
RUSSEL REITER; WALTER MANUCHA; QIANG MA; SERGIO ROSALES-CORRAL
Revista:
Journal of Current Science and Technology
Editorial:
Rangsit University
Referencias:
Lugar: Patumthani; Año: 2020 vol. 10 p. 85 - 98
ISSN:
2630-0583
Resumen:
This review considers the role of melatonin as an oncostatic agent and particularly as to how it relates to the mechanisms by which melatonin regulates glucose metabolism in cancer cells. Many tumor cells adopt a means of glucose utilization that is different from that of normal cells. Thus, these cancer cells rapidly take up and metabolize glucose and after it is converted to pyruvate, they accelerate the production of lactate which is abundantly released into the circulation. The change in metabolism that cancer cells makes is referred to as the Warburg effect, or aerobic glycolysis. The switch to aerobic glycolysis affords cancer cells major advantages in terms of an accelerated rate of ATP production and the synthesis of abundant molecular building blocks required for rapid proliferation, invasion, and metastasis. In normal cells, the bulk of the pyruvate formed is shunted into the mitochondria for conversion to acetyl-CoA. Melatonin forces cancer cells to abandon aerobic glycolysis and function with a normal cell phenotype. The oncostatic agent, melatonin, does this by upregulating the enzyme, pyruvate dehydrogenase complex, that ensures pyruvate to acetyl-CoA metabolism; this is presumably achieved by the direct or indirect inhibition of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase, which normally downregulates pyruvate dehydrogenase complex. By depriving cancer cells of aerobic glycolysis, melatonin converts them to a normal cell phenotype which reduces the rapid cell proliferation and aggressive nature of cancer cells.