Amr Ali Mohamed Abdelgawwad El-Sehrawy , Chou-Yi Hsu , Ali G. Alkhathami , Muktesh Chandra , Tina Saeed Basunduwah , H. Malathi , Jitendra Narayan Senapati , Apurav Gautam , Mundher Kadhem , Hatif Abdulrazaq Yasin
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Metabolic reprogramming: The driving force behind cancer drug resistance
Metabolic reprogramming enables stress adaptation of cancer cells to treatment and is a primary causative force of drug resistance. Dysregulation of glucose, amino acid, and lipid metabolism supplies energy, biosynthetic precursors, and redox balance, promoting survival in the treated tumor. These processes are coordinated by oncogenic signaling, loss of tumor suppressors, and regulatory non-coding RNAs, which promote cancer stemness, immune evasion, and resistance to apoptosis. This review examines the mechanisms by which central metabolic pathways, particularly glycolysis, glutamine metabolism, and fatty acid synthesis, are altered to facilitate drug resistance in various types of cancer. Additionally, we report on novel therapeutic approaches that exploit such metabolic weaknesses to prevent therapy resistance and enhance clinical outcomes. Future directions emphasize the need for advanced metabolic profiling to personalize treatment approaches and the clinical translation of promising preclinical findings to overcome this significant obstacle in cancer therapy.
期刊介绍:
Seminars in Oncology brings you current, authoritative, and practical reviews of developments in the etiology, diagnosis and management of cancer. Each issue examines topics of clinical importance, with an emphasis on providing both the basic knowledge needed to better understand a topic as well as evidence-based opinions from leaders in the field. Seminars in Oncology also seeks to be a venue for sharing a diversity of opinions including those that might be considered "outside the box". We welcome a healthy and respectful exchange of opinions and urge you to approach us with your insights as well as suggestions of topics that you deem worthy of coverage. By helping the reader understand the basic biology and the therapy of cancer as they learn the nuances from experts, all in a journal that encourages the exchange of ideas we aim to help move the treatment of cancer forward.