Publication | Closed Access
THE HEXOSE MONOPHOSPHATE PATHWAY IN ETHYLNITROSOUREA INDUCED TUMORS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM
24
Citations
47
References
1978
Year
PathologyCellular PharmacologyMetabolic RemodelingTumor BiologyNewborn BrainNeuro-oncologyMetabolic SignalingCancer MetabolismNeurochemistryHuman MetabolismHealth SciencesBiochemistryInherited Metabolic DiseaseCo 2The Nervous SystemMetabolomicsPharmacologyCell BiologyMalignant DiseasePhenazine MethosulfateEnergy MetabolismSignal TransductionPhysiologyNeuroendocrine DisorderMetabolismMedicine
Abstract— Respiration studies in vitro , in which tissue slices were incubated with [1‐ 14 C]glucose or [6‐ 14 C]glucose and 14 CO 2 collected, resulted in C‐1/C‐6 14 CO 2 ratios that were higher in slices of tumor and newborn brain than in slices of adult brain. In adult brain, the C‐1/C‐6 14 CO 2 ratio averaged close to unity. In slices of tumor and newborn brain however, the mean C‐1/C‐6 ratio was greater than three. Addition of phenazine methosulfate (PMS) increased conversion of [1‐ 14 C]glucose to 14 CO 2 in slices of normal adult brain 5‐fold, and in slices of newborn brain and tumor, approx 12‐fold. Injection of animals with 6‐aminonicotinamide (6‐AN) decreased conversion of [1‐ 14 C]glucose in slices of normal brain 30% but decreased conversion in tumor slices by 80%. Evidence supports the presence of an active hexose monophosphate pathway (HMP) in tumors of the nervous system regulated in part by available NADP + levels. Inhibition by 6‐AN was more effective in tumors than in normal adult brain.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1