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Kisspeptin-10

KP-10, Metastin (45-54), Kisspeptin-10 (human), KiSS-1

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 2
2014 pubmed 679 citations

The Warburg effect in tumor progression: mitochondrial oxidative metabolism as an anti-metastasis mechanism.

Lu. Jianrong J; Tan. Ming M; Cai. Qingsong Q

Key Findings

  • Cancer cells limit mitochondrial oxidation to avoid ROS and resist anoikis, aiding metastasis.
  • Increasing glucose oxidation in cancer cells raises ROS and restores sensitivity to anoikis, reducing metastatic potential.
  • Metastasis‑suppressing factors like p53 and the peptide KISS1 promote mitochondrial metabolism, while pro‑metastatic factors HIF and Snail inhibit it.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the takeaway is that interventions that boost mitochondrial oxidative metabolism (e.g., certain diets, exercise, or metabolic modulators) might theoretically help limit cancer spread, but there’s no direct evidence for using kisspeptin‑10 as a supplement. More research is needed before any specific protocol can be recommended.

Summary

The paper explains that cancer cells often avoid using their mitochondria for energy (the Warburg effect) so they produce less harmful reactive oxygen species (ROS) and become more resistant to a type of cell death that stops metastasis. Forcing cancer cells to burn glucose in the mitochondria raises ROS, making them vulnerable again. The peptide KISS1 (kisspeptin) is mentioned as a natural factor that can push cells toward mitochondrial metabolism, potentially suppressing spread of tumors.

Abstract

Compared to normal cells, cancer cells strongly upregulate glucose uptake and glycolysis to give rise to increased yield of intermediate glycolytic metabolites and the end product pyruvate. Moreover, glycolysis is uncoupled from the mitochondrial tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle and oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) in cancer cells. Consequently, the majority of glycolysis-derived pyruvate is diverted to lactate fermentation and kept away from mitochondrial oxidative metabolism. This metabolic phenotype is known as the Warburg effect. While it has become widely accepted that the glycolytic intermediates provide essential anabolic support for cell proliferation and tumor growth, it remains largely elusive whether and how the Warburg metabolic phenotype may play a role in tumor progression. We hereby review the cause and consequence of the restrained oxidative metabolism, in particular in the context of tumor metastasis. Cells change or lose their extracellular matrix during the metastatic process. Inadequate/inappropriate matrix attachment generates reactive oxygen species (ROS) and causes a specific type of cell death, termed anoikis, in normal cells. Although anoikis is a barrier to metastasis, cancer cells have often acquired elevated threshold for anoikis and hence heightened metastatic potential. As ROS are inherent byproducts of oxidative metabolism, forced stimulation of glucose oxidation in cancer cells raises oxidative stress and restores cells' sensitivity to anoikis. Therefore, by limiting the pyruvate flux into mitochondrial oxidative metabolism, the Warburg effect enables cancer cells to avoid excess ROS generation from mitochondrial respiration and thus gain increased anoikis resistance and survival advantage for metastasis. Consistent with this notion, pro-metastatic transcription factors HIF and Snail attenuate oxidative metabolism, whereas tumor suppressor p53 and metastasis suppressor KISS1 promote mitochondrial oxidation. Collectively, these findings reveal mitochondrial oxidative metabolism as a critical suppressor of metastasis and justify metabolic therapies for potential prevention/intervention of tumor metastasis.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2014

Date

2014-04-13T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.canlet.2014.04.001

Citations

679

References

95