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Cancer proliferation and therapy: the Warburg effect and quantum metabolism

Lloyd A Demetrius1 email, Johannes F Coy2 email and Jack A Tuszynski3 email

Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA

TAVARLIN AG/TAVARGENIX GmbH, Landwehrstraße 54, 64293 Darmstadt, Germany

Department of Experimental Oncology, Cross Cancer Institute, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada

author email corresponding author email

Theoretical Biology and Medical Modelling 2010, 7:2doi:10.1186/1742-4682-7-2

Published: 19 January 2010

Abstract

Background

Most cancer cells, in contrast to normal differentiated cells, rely on aerobic glycolysis instead of oxidative phosphorylation to generate metabolic energy, a phenomenon called the Warburg effect.

Model

Quantum metabolism is an analytic theory of metabolic regulation which exploits the methodology of quantum mechanics to derive allometric rules relating cellular metabolic rate and cell size. This theory explains differences in the metabolic rates of cells utilizing OxPhos and cells utilizing glycolysis. This article appeals to an analytic relation between metabolic rate and evolutionary entropy - a demographic measure of Darwinian fitness - to: (a) provide an evolutionary rationale for the Warburg effect, and (b) propose methods based on entropic principles of natural selection for regulating the incidence of OxPhos and glycolysis in cancer cells.

Conclusion

The regulatory interventions proposed on the basis of quantum metabolism have applications in therapeutic strategies to combat cancer. These procedures, based on metabolic regulation, are non-invasive, and complement the standard therapeutic methods involving radiation and chemotherapy


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