Cancer's sweet tooth for serine
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Correspondence: Ji Luo ji.luo@nih.gov
Medical Oncology Branch, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, NIH, 10 Center Drive, 12N226, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA
Breast Cancer Research 2011, 13:317 doi:10.1186/bcr2932
Published: 28 November 2011Abstract
Exemplified by the cancer cell's preference for glycolysis (the Warburg effect), altered metabolism has taken centerstage as an emerging hallmark of cancer. Charting the landscape of cancer metabolic addictions should reveal new avenues for therapeutic attack. Two recent studies found subsets of human melanoma and breast cancers to have high levels of phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PHGDH), a key enzyme for serine biosynthesis, and these cancer cells are dependent on PHGDH for their growth and survival. Tumors may thus harbor distinct metabolic alterations to support their malignancy, and targeting enzymes such as PHGDH might prove a viable therapeutic strategy in this scenario.