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The biological significance of cancer: mitochondria as a cause of cancer and the inhibition of glycolysis with citrate a

mitochondria cancer citrate

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#1 osris

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Posted 13 May 2016 - 03:03 PM


Abstract
 
In this article, I present the hypothesis that cancer presents due to the domination of the cell by mitochondria, which, from an evolution viewpoint, appeared in multi-cellular living being with the incorporation of a bacteria into a primitive cell, the bacteria sustained itself as mitochondria and these conserved their identity and bacterial characteristics, based on this, the hypothesis is suggested of the biological competition between the cell and the mitochondria; the mitochondria, on establishing itself as an independent entity within the cell, created the need to permanently remain in the cytoplasm of the cell, thus, from an energy viewpoint, when a cell becomes malignant, the mitochondria are the sole beneficiaries, as there is an ideal environment at the cellular level for the mitochondria to sustain their functions, and from this hypothesis, the treatment for fighting cancer consists of inhibiting glycolysis, being the principal source of energy for the mitochondria, this is achieved by administering citrate to cancer patients, as the citrate inhibits the phosphofructokinase enzyme, the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex and the succinate dehydrogenase enzyme of Krebs cycle, thus, the mitochondria will be forced to limit their metabolism and, secondarily, will lower the reproduction capacity of the cell in general
 

 


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#2 Logic

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Posted 13 May 2016 - 07:34 PM

You need to read up on the Warburg effect and how cancerous cells change from OXPHOS to glycolysis for energy production and how this shutdown of mitochondria prevents them from sending out an apoptosis signal for that defective cell.

 

You will end up on a million snake oil sites if you type Warburg effect into Google,

Use the GoogleSiteSearch function in the search dropdown menu here.

Antiagingfirewalls has very good writeups on this too.



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#3 normalizing

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Posted 15 May 2016 - 02:54 PM

dont talk to me before you cure cancer, cure cancer then talk to me


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#4 Astrocyte

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Posted 30 May 2016 - 06:20 AM

Glycolysis "fork" at the stage of production of pyruvate. Pyruvate can be feed to the mitochondrion for the Krebs cycle to produce energy. This is called aerobic respiration or aerobic glycolysis. This is the efficient normal way for the cell to produce energy.

 

Pyruvate can also be used outside and without help of the mitochondrion to produce lactate for energy when oxygen is restricted. This is called anaerobic glycolysis or fermentation. It is a less efficient way to produce cell energy, cancerous cells usually have the anaerobic glycolysis pathway production rate many time that of a normal differentiated cell with operational mitochondria.

 

It is widely believed that the mitochondria are either disabled or malfunctioning in a cancerous cell, thus preference for fermentation. Also it is worth noting that mitochondrion are central for the programmed cell death (apoptosis).

 

Sometime we find some of those papers that state that everything we know about cell metabolism is in reverse. Frankly I don't know what to think about these papers. I have lots of doubts that all the modern knowledge that have been established sometime a long time ago, would be as wrong as stated in these papers.

 

Also, glycolysis is not the only pathway to provide energy to a cell, there are many others, one of interest in the fight of cancer is ketosis.


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#5 Logic

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Posted 01 June 2016 - 04:21 PM

dont talk to me before you cure cancer, cure cancer then talk to me

 

 

"I expect the original author has not returned to the website since his pet's demise."

 

"Actually it is quite the opposite, the dog is doing really well. I wanted to return and post an update but was going to do this after I had arranged another scan so that I could give a clearer picture. In the time since my original post the following has happened:

1) The dog has put on nearly 5kg
2) Generally he seems really well and does not present in any way that he is ill.
3) He eats 3 times a day and is as crazy about food as before the cancer diagnosis (even stealing food by opening doors!)
3) For the last 6 months I have been walking the dog between 3-5 miles every day...

I am enormously grateful for the help I have received on here, especially to Logic who has been fantastic..."

http://www.longecity...ndpost&p=640960

 

http://www.longecity...ndpost&p=697361

http://www.longecity...ndpost&p=765904

 

But. if its all the same to you, I still won't talk to you..!  

:)


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#6 Psilociraptor1

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Posted 28 June 2016 - 11:39 PM

I dont buy it. In fact, cancer energy metabolism is exactly what convinces me that cancer is NOT a clonal darwinian process. What has been largely overlooked is the fact that aerobic glycolysis (the warburg effect) is a normal function of proliferating cells in general http://www.ncbi.nlm..../pubmed/9141507. Insulin resistance develops during inflammatory stress response initiating b-oxidation of fatty acids. This allows the body to preserve glucose for reductive biosynthesis and redox maintenance. Instead of oxidizing glucose fully, OXPHOS utilizes glucose for anaplerosis in differentiated cells which produces no net carbon loss from glucose. In dividing cells glucose primarily fluxes between the pentose phosphate pathway and aerobic glycolysis. This allows the cell to generate large amounts of ATP and NADPH as it can excrete lactose which undergoes Cori cycling to be recycled into glucose in the liver. This is important as it allows for the proliferation of immune cells, damaged tissues, generation of peroxide radicals, reduction of glutathione, etc during stress response. If the body wasted glucose in OXPHOS, protein catabolism would occur and lead to rapid death. So aerobic glycolysis in cancer cells is not a result of mitochondrial dysfunction. Cancer cells are in essence functioning as a wound and attempting to recycle lactose for systemic processes.

 

My personal opinion is that we're going to find sooner or later that cancer is an inherently infectious process. So called "stealth" pathogens such as mycoplasmas, chlamydias, borrelias, treponemas, bartonellas, ehrlichias, rickettsias, babesias, etc are notoriously difficult to diagnose, highly refractory to antibiotic treatment and highly capable of generating the kinds of environments that are essential to tumor formation. In fact, it is their direct strategies to inhibit apoptosis and cell mediated immunity against infected cells (because they often reside within them). They employ liberal use of matrix metallo proteinases to navigate deep tissues and the consequence of generalized chronic inflammation is the expression of growth factors, angiogenic growth factors, chemokines, adhesion proteins, genotoxic peroxides, etc. Most of these organisms have already been implicated as causal elements in certain cancers and I think we need to take the hint.


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#7 tunt01

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Posted 29 June 2016 - 12:55 AM

If the body wasted glucose in OXPHOS, protein catabolism would occur and lead to rapid death. So aerobic glycolysis in cancer cells is not a result of mitochondrial dysfunction. Cancer cells are in essence functioning as a wound and attempting to recycle lactose for systemic processes.

 

 

I really liked your thought on Warburg metabolism.  Quick Q to make sure I have my understanding right -- why would pushing pyruvate through OXPHOS result in protein catabolism?  I'm not sure I understand why it would trigger gluconeogenesis (if that's what you are implying).



#8 Psilociraptor1

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Posted 29 June 2016 - 04:36 AM

 

If the body wasted glucose in OXPHOS, protein catabolism would occur and lead to rapid death. So aerobic glycolysis in cancer cells is not a result of mitochondrial dysfunction. Cancer cells are in essence functioning as a wound and attempting to recycle lactose for systemic processes.

 

 

I really liked your thought on Warburg metabolism.  Quick Q to make sure I have my understanding right -- why would pushing pyruvate through OXPHOS result in protein catabolism?  I'm not sure I understand why it would trigger gluconeogenesis (if that's what you are implying).

 

 

You have to think of this in the evolutionary as well as whole-body context. Evolutionarily stress may involve things like serious infection, starvation, breaking a leg, etc that prohibit nutrient acquisition. Nowadays we have our family bring us pizza or whatever and there's no shortage or calories. Not every organism has had that luxury though and so insulin resistance is a highly conserved stress response mechanism to conserve glucose and protein for the acute phase response. It's not that pushing pyruvate through OXPHOS itself causes protein catabolism, it's that glucose depletion causes protein catabolism. Fat can not produce net glucose and glucose is mandatory for the pentose phosphate pathway and associated pathways and so glucose depletion inevitably results in peripheral protein catabolism to fulfill those needs (hence muscle wasting in starvation). Protein depletion almost always outpaces fatty acid depletion so conservation is critical. So what happens is that loss of insulin signaling results in the phosphorylation and inhibition of pyruvate dehydogenase, diverting pyruvate away from oxidation and towards anaplerosis via pyruvate carboxylase and the formation of oxaloacetate. This way no carbon is lost from glucose as CO2 but rather it is lost via beta-oxidation->OXPHOS. So each round (assuming intermediates are not used) will result in the input of one molecule of oxaloacetate from glucose and the output of one molecule of oxaloacetate which can then be recycled to glucose if needed. If glucose undergoes full oxidation, then you lose a glucose molecule for every 3 rounds of OXPHOS and that's less glucose available for the acute phase response. 

 

During stress response insulin resistance triggers gluconeogenesis. So for the cells that are not proliferating, they are largely burning fatty acids without burning glucose. For the cells that are proliferating, they are fluctuating between the pentose phosphate pathway and aerobic glycolysis. This allows them to produce necessary ATP as well as massive amounts of NADPH without wasting glucose as lactate can enter the Cori cycle for gluconeogenesis and maintain glucose status

 

Hopefully that answers it and without any serious errors. This kratom man... :P

 

So if you take the infectious disease model i proposed you basically end up in a scenario like this... Say something like a spirochete gets into the blood stream, stimulates endothelial damage as it tries to dip out of the blood stream where the majority of immune cells are circulating. Inflammation is stimulated generating insulin resistance, VLDL secretion, cholesterol synthesis, lipoprotein lipase activity. Lipoproteins start circulating with endotoxin binding proteins, mopping up immunogenic materials from the endothelial tissue and bringing them back to the liver. So then that spirochete is going to use a host of matrix proteinases to move its way through the extracelluar matrix and say, enter the brain where it may penetrate a neural cell. Like most parasites it down regulates apoptosis mechanisms and immuno surveillance of damaged cells through redundant mechanisms, effectively immortalizing those cells and ensuring its persistance. So your immune cells are now using that glucose that the body was preserving to proliferate and generate massive amounts of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species against these pathogens via NADPH. If youre lucky the infection is cleared. If not these reactive species over time damage DNA strands and lead to tissue death. So now you have a scenario where the tissue is genetically damaged and interspersed by immortalized cells. In order to heal the tissue the surrounding cells coordinate the secretion of growth factors, angiogenic growth factors and so on to encourage healing. Dividing cells again utilize aerobic glycolysis and the pentose phosphate pathway for glutathione reduction, DNA synthesis, etc using up massive amounts of glucose and secreting lactate (i realize i said lactose before :P). Ultimately the gene damage adds up causing the immortalized cells to respond inappropriately to proliferative and migratory immune signals leading to tumorigenesis and metastesis along chemotactic pathways. Just a vague example of where I'm going with this...
 

Edit: I realize I've been flagged for "needs references". This is a compilation of my understandings from reading literature on diverse subjects. I did this for myself and my own health journey and do not have one single reference or even a pocketfull that i keep on hand. This is my understanding, my model of interpreting the science. That said much is just basic metabolism interpreted in a different light. If one has any uncertainties about something I say or wishes me to try and find a reference for a particular point I'm more than glad to try. But obviously there is a teleological argument which is my own.


Edited by Psilociraptor1, 29 June 2016 - 05:02 AM.

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#9 Logic

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Posted 30 June 2016 - 10:25 AM

A very interesting theory Psilociraptor1!  Welcome to the Longecity!  :)
I feel that it builds on my understanding of the Warburg Effect by answering a lot of the whys and wherefores.

 

Dont overlook the power of  AGEs and a disbiotic, leaky gut to cause the type of inflammation you speak of.

Here is a post on antibiotics curing cancer:
http://www.longecity...ndpost&p=770410

 

I would suggest you contact James P Watson as I'm sure the two of you would have a lot to say to each other! :)

http://www.anti-agin....com/?s=warburg

 

From scanning your posts I think you would be interested in DRACO, Bauvitaximab,  Teixobactin
http://www.longecity...infected-cells/

http://www.longecity...m-bacteria-100/

http://www.peregrine...b-oncology.html

https://www.scienced...81123150247.htm



#10 normalizing

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Posted 30 June 2016 - 12:03 PM

what an awesome idea to use antibiotics against cancer. since current anti-cancer drugs arent already enough neurotoxic, toxic to the whole body overall, add antibiotics which have countless articles stating they are pretty neurotoxic, generally toxic to the whole body. im pretty sure if you combo the two you will definitely destroy thy cancer!


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#11 Logic

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Posted 30 June 2016 - 01:08 PM

Understanding the Warburg Effect: The Metabolic Requirements of Cell Proliferation

http://www.ncbi.nlm....les/PMC2849637/



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#12 Psilociraptor1

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Posted 30 June 2016 - 03:54 PM

what an awesome idea to use antibiotics against cancer. since current anti-cancer drugs arent already enough neurotoxic, toxic to the whole body overall, add antibiotics which have countless articles stating they are pretty neurotoxic, generally toxic to the whole body. im pretty sure if you combo the two you will definitely destroy thy cancer!

 

To be honest there are abundant opportunities here to explore natural compounds with more complex effects on tumor formation, immune regulation, biofilm regulation, and the human/microorganism ecosystem. Just because the western approach is to poison everything out of the body doesn't mean that's what we have to divert to in recognizing the role of microbes. Some antibiotic regimine is probably inevitable but I'm pretty sure most of these organisms are far more damaging than antibiotics.

 

 

A very interesting theory Psilociraptor1!  Welcome to the Longecity!   :)
I feel that it builds on my understanding of the Warburg Effect by answering a lot of the whys and wherefores.

 

Dont overlook the power of  AGEs and a disbiotic, leaky gut to cause the type of inflammation you speak of.

Here is a post on antibiotics curing cancer:
http://www.longecity...ndpost&p=770410

 

I would suggest you contact James P Watson as I'm sure the two of you would have a lot to say to each other! :)

http://www.anti-agin....com/?s=warburg

 

From scanning your posts I think you would be interested in DRACO, Bauvitaximab,  Teixobactin
http://www.longecity...infected-cells/

http://www.longecity...m-bacteria-100/

http://www.peregrine...b-oncology.html

https://www.scienced...81123150247.htm

 

Thanks bud I'll look into those. I'm definitely familiar with leaky gut and it certainly plays a role in driving these sorts of systemic metabolic alterations

http://diabetes.diab...ntent/56/7/1761. I'm no longer convinced it's the be all end all. Like many I was under the impression that the internal body was sterile but it seems thats no longer the case. I really do think intracellular parasites play a very important role in this process. Some of those do in fact come from mucosal layers and are discussed here http://www.longecity...se/#entry780695 But many are also acquired as vector borne pathogens or through open wounds, animal bites, sexual transmission etc.







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