Previous studies have found that high doses of vitamin C supplementation lower serum uric acid via a uricosuric effect
fructose consumption coincided with the increasing trend of serum uric acid
Fructose is known to induce uric acid production by increasing ATP degradation to AMP, a uric acid precursor (85, 93, 94) and thus, within minutes after fructose infusion, serum uric acid levels rise
Low endogenous bioavailable testosterone levels have been shown to be associated with higher rates
of all‐cause and cardiovascular‐related mortality.39,41,46–47 Patients suffering from CAD,13–18 CHF,137 T2DM,25–26 and obesity27–28
have all been shown to have lower levels of endogenous testosterone compared with those in healthy controls. In addition,
the severity of CAD15,17,29–30 and CHF137 correlates with the degree of testosterone deficiency
In patients with CHF, testosterone replacement therapy has been shown to significantly improve exercise tolerance while having
no effect on LVEF
testosterone therapy causes a shift in the skeletal muscle of CHF patients toward a higher concentration
of type I muscle fibers
Testosterone replacement therapy has also been shown to improve the homeostatic model of insulin resistance and hemoglobin
A1c in diabetics26,68–69 and to lower the BMI in obese patients.
Lower levels of endogenous testosterone have been associated with longer duration of the QTc
interval
testosterone replacement has been shown to shorten the QTc interval
negative correlation has been demonstrated between endogenous testosterone levels and IMT of the carotid arteries,
abdominal aorta, and thoracic aorta
These findings suggest that men with lower levels of endogenous testosterone may be at a higher risk of developing atherosclerosis.
Current guidelines from the Endocrine Society make no recommendations on whether patients with heart
disease should be screened for hypogonadism and do not recommend supplementing patients with heart disease to improve survival.
The Massachusetts Male Aging Study also projects ≈481 000 new cases of hypogonadism annually in US men within the same age
group
since 1993 prescriptions for testosterone, regardless of the formulation, have increased nearly 500%
Testosterone levels are lower in patients with chronic illnesses
such as end‐stage renal disease, human immunodeficiency virus, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, type 2 diabetes mellitus
(T2DM), obesity, and several genetic conditions such as Klinefelter syndrome
A growing body of evidence suggests that men with lower levels of endogenous testosterone are more prone to develop CAD during
their lifetimes
There are 2 major potential confounding factors that the older studies generally failed to account for. These factors are
the subfraction of testosterone used to perform the analysis and the method used to account for subclinical CAD.
The biologically inactive form of testosterone is tightly bound to SHBG and is therefore unable to bind to androgen receptors
The biologically inactive fraction of testosterone comprises nearly 68% of the total testosterone in human serum
The biologically active subfraction of testosterone, also referred to as bioavailable testosterone, is either loosely bound
to albumin or circulates freely in the blood, the latter referred to as free testosterone
It is estimated that ≈30% of total serum testosterone is bound to albumin, whereas the remaining 1% to 3% circulates as free
testosterone
it can be argued that using the biologically active
form of testosterone to evaluate the association with CAD will produce the most reliable results
English et al14 found statistically significant lower levels of bioavailable testosterone, free testosterone, and free androgen index in
patients with catheterization‐proven CAD compared with controls with normal coronary arteries
patients with catheterization‐proven CAD had statistically significant lower levels of bioavailable
testosterone
In conclusion, existing evidence suggests that men with CAD have lower levels of endogenous testosterone,13–18 and more specifically lower levels of bioavailable testosterone
low testosterone levels are associated with risk factors for CAD such as T2DM25–26 and obesity
In a meta‐analysis of these 7 population‐based studies, Araujo et al41 showed a trend toward increased cardiovascular mortality associated with lower levels of total testosterone, but statistical
significance was not achieved (RR, 1.25
the authors showed that a decrease of 2.1 standard deviations in levels of total testosterone was associated
with a 25% increase in the risk of cardiovascular mortality
the relative risk of all‐cause mortality in men
with lower levels of total testosterone was calculated to be 1.35
higher risk of cardiovascular mortality is associated with lower levels of bioavailable testosterone
Existing evidence seems to suggest that lower levels of endogenous testosterone are associated with higher rates of all‐cause
mortality and cardiovascular mortality
studies have shown that lower levels of endogenous bioavailable testosterone are associated with higher rates
of all‐cause and cardiovascular mortality
It may be possible that using bioavailable testosterone to perform mortality analysis will yield more accurate results because
it prevents the biologically inactive subfraction of testosterone from playing a potential confounding role in the analysis
The earliest published material
on this matter dates to the late 1930s
the concept that testosterone replacement therapy improves angina has yet to be proven wrong
In more
recent studies, 3 randomized, placebo‐controlled trials demonstrated that administration of testosterone improves myocardial
ischemia in men with CAD
The improvement in myocardial ischemia was shown to occur in response to both acute and chronic
testosterone therapy and seemed to be independent of whether an intravenous or transdermal formulation of testosterone was
used.
testosterone had no effect on endothelial nitric oxide activity
There is growing evidence from in
vivo animal models and in vitro models that testosterone induces coronary vasodilation by modulating the activity of ion channels,
such as potassium and calcium channels, on the surface of vascular smooth muscle cells
Experimental studies suggest that
the most likely mechanism of action for testosterone on vascular smooth muscle cells is via modulation of action of non‐ATP‐sensitive
potassium ion channels, calcium‐activated potassium ion channels, voltage‐sensitive potassium ion channels, and finally L‐type
calcium ion channels
Corona et al confirmed those results by demonstrating that not only total testosterone levels are lower among diabetics,
but also the levels of free testosterone and SHBG are lower in diabetic patients
Laaksonen et al65 followed 702 Finnish men for 11 years and demonstrated that men in the lowest quartile of total testosterone, free testosterone,
and SHBG were more likely to develop T2DM and metabolic syndrome.
Vikan et al followed 1454 Swedish men for 11
years and discovered that men in the highest quartile of total testosterone were significantly less likely to develop T2DM
authors demonstrated a statistically significant increase in the incidence of T2DM in subjects receiving gonadotropin‐releasing
hormone antagonist therapy. In addition, a significant increase in the rate of myocardial infarction, stroke, sudden cardiac
death, and development of cardiovascular disease was noted in patients receiving antiandrogen therapy.67
Several authors have demonstrated
that the administration of testosterone in diabetic men improves the homeostatic model of insulin resistance, hemoglobin A1c,
and fasting plasma glucose
Existing evidence strongly suggests that the levels of total and free testosterone are lower among diabetic patients compared
with those in nondiabetics
insulin seems to be acting as a stimulant for the hypothalamus to secret gonadotropin‐releasing
hormone, which consequently results in increased testosterone production. It can be argued that decreased stimulation of the
hypothalamus in diabetics secondary to insulin deficiency could result in hypogonadotropic hypogonadism
BMI has been shown to be inversely associated with testosterone levels
This interaction may be a result
of the promotion of lipolysis in abdominal adipose tissue by testosterone, which may in turn cause reduced abdominal adiposity.
On the other hand, given that adipose tissue has a higher concentration of the enzyme aromatase, it could be that increased
adipose tissue results in more testosterone being converted to estrogen, thereby causing hypogonadism. Third, increased abdominal
obesity may cause reduced testosterone secretion by negatively affecting the hypothalamus‐pituitary‐testicular axis. Finally,
testosterone may be the key factor in activating the enzyme 11‐hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase in adipose tissue, which transforms
glucocorticoids into their inactive form.
increasing age may alter the association between testosterone and CRP. Another possible explanation
for the association between testosterone level and CRP is central obesity and waist circumference
Bai et al
have provided convincing evidence that testosterone might be able to shorten the QTc interval by augmenting the activity of
slowly activating delayed rectifier potassium channels while simultaneously slowing the activity of L‐type calcium channels
consistent evidence
that supplemental testosterone shortens the QTc interval.
Intima‐media thickness (IMT) of the carotid artery is considered a marker for preclinical atherosclerosis
Studies have shown that levels of endogenous testosterone are inversely
associated with IMT of the carotid artery,126–128,32,129–130 as well as both the thoracic134 and the abdominal aorta
1 study has demonstrated that lower levels of free testosterone are associated with accelerated progression
of carotid artery IMT
another study has reported that decreased levels of total and bioavailable testosterone are associated with progression
of atherosclerosis in the abdominal aorta
These findings suggest that normal physiologic testosterone levels may help to protect men from the development of atherosclerosis
Czesla et al successfully demonstrated that the muscle specimens that were exposed to metenolone had a significant shift
in their composition toward type I muscle fibers
Type I muscle fibers, also known as slow‐twitch or oxidative fibers, are
associated with enhanced strength and physical capability
It has been shown
that those with advanced CHF have a higher percentage of type II muscle fibers, based on muscle biopsy
Studies have
shown that men with CHF suffer from reduced levels of total and free testosterone.137 It has also been shown that reduced testosterone levels in men with CHF portends a poor prognosis and is associated with
increased CHF mortality.138 Reduced testosterone has also been shown to correlate negatively with exercise capacity in CHF patients.
Testosterone replacement therapy has been shown to significantly improve exercise capacity, without affecting LVEF
the results of the 3 meta‐analyses seem to indicate that testosterone replacement therapy does not cause an increase
in the rate of adverse cardiovascular events
Data from 3 meta‐analyses seem to contradict the commonly
held belief that testosterone administration may increase the risk of developing prostate cancer
One meta‐analysis reported
an increase in all prostate‐related adverse events with testosterone administration.146 However, when each prostate‐related event, including prostate cancer and a rise in PSA, was analyzed separately, no differences
were observed between the testosterone group and the placebo group
the existing data from the 3 meta‐analyses seem to indicate that testosterone replacement therapy does not increase
the risk of adverse cardiovascular events
the authors correctly
point out the weaknesses of their study which include retrospective study design and lack of randomization, small sample size
at extremes of follow‐up, lack of outcome validation by chart review and poor generalizability of the results given that only
male veterans with CAD were included in this study
the studies that failed to find an association
between testosterone and CRP used an older population group
low testosterone may influence the severity of CAD by adversely affecting
the mediators of the inflammatory response such as high‐sensitivity C‐reactive protein, interleukin‐6, and tumor necrosis
factor–α
Good review of Testosterone and CHD. Low T is associated with increased all cause mortality and cardiovascular mortality, CAD, CHF, type II diabetes, obesity, increased IMT, increased severity of CAD and CHF. Testosterone replacement in men with low T has been shown to improve exercise tolerance in CHF, improve insulin resistance, improve HgbA1c and lower BMI in the obese.
HFCS consists of fructose and glucose mixed in a variety of concentrations, but most commonly as 55% fructose and 45% glucose
In the United States, HFCS and sucrose are the major sources of fructose in the diet, and HFCS is a major ingredient in soft drinks, pastries, desserts, and various processed foods
fructose and glucose are metabolized in completely different ways and utilize different GLUT transporters
In the liver, fructose bypasses the two highly regulated steps of glycolysis, catalyzed by glucokinase/hexokinase and phosphofructokinase both of which are inhibited by increasing concentrations of their byproducts. Instead, fructose enters the pathway at a level that is not regulated and is metabolized to fructose-1-phosphate primarily by fructokinase or ketohexokinase
Fructokinase has no negative feedback system, and ATP is used for the phosphorylation process. As a result, continued fructose metabolism results in intracellular phosphate depletion, activation of AMP deaminase, and uric acid generation which is harmful at the cellular level
Uric acid, a byproduct of fructose degradation,
Uric acid inhibits endothelial NO both in vivo and in vitro, [15] and directly induces adipocyte dysfunction
Serum uric acid increases rapidly after ingestion of fructose, resulting in increases as high as 2 mg/dL within 1 hour
Uncontrolled fructose metabolism leads to postprandial hypertriglyceridemia, which increases visceral adipose deposition. Visceral adiposity contributes to hepatic triglyceride accumulation, protein kinase C activation, and hepatic insulin resistance by increasing the portal delivery of free fatty acids to the liver
Several reviews have concluded that intake of both fructose and HFCS by children and adults was associated with an increased risk of obesity and metabolic syndrome
Sucrose is a disaccharide that is comprised of fructose and glucose
The relationship of low testosterone to MetS often is considered to be bidirectional; however, the relationships probably are not direct
Many of the components of the MetS are recognized risk factors for the development of cardiovascular disease (CVD)
Multiple cross-sectional studies have found low TT and low sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG) levels in Caucasian and African-American men with the MetS, irrespective of age
Low TT and SHBG levels also are prevalent in Chinese [7],[8] and Korean [9] men with the MetS
Normally 40%-50% of TT is bound to SHBG, so reducing SHBG levels will decrease TT.
Hyperinsulinism suppresses SHBG synthesis and secretion by the liver
significant increase in SHBG levels occurred after acutely lowering insulin levels in obese men
Estradiol levels are increased in men with the MetS, and they are positively correlated with the number of abnormal components of the MetS.
Although it is known that estrogen will increase SHBG levels, apparently the hyperinsulinism associated with obesity has a greater effect on SHBG levels
Estradiol also can inhibit luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion
Inflammatory cytokines are thought to have a direct effect on the pituitary to reduce LH secretion [15] and also a direct effect on Leydig cell secretion of testosterone
Low TT Levels have been shown to predict development of the MetS in men with normal BMI
Men in the lowest quartiles of serum TT, calculated free testosterone (cFT) and SHBG at baseline had the highest odds ratios for developing the MetS or DM during the 11 years follow-up
More recently, investigators conducting population-based studies have reported that only SHBG is associated with future development of the MetS
Additional evidence that low TT increases the risk of MetS comes from androgen deprivation treatment of prostate cancer
Low TT and low bioavailable testosterone (bT) were each significantly associated with elevated 20 years risk of CVD mortality in an older population in which cause-specific mortality was age, adiposity, and lifestyle-adjusted.
combination of low bT and ATP III-defined MetS is associated with increased cardiovascular mortality in men aged 40 years and above
in elderly men, testosterone may weakly protect against CVD. Alternatively, low TT may indicate poor general health
Muraleedharan and Jones [27] concluded that there is convincing evidence that low T is a biomarker for disease severity and mortality.
The evidence that TRT improves insulin sensitivity and glucose control is conflicted
It is widely recognized that testosterone treatment can reduce fat mass and increase lean body mass; however, until recently most reports have not been associated with much weight loss
Changes in body composition and weight loss are considered potential mechanisms by which testosterone treatment improves insulin sensitivity and glucose control in patients with diabetes. Effects on inflammatory cytokines [38] and changes in oxidative metabolism [39] also have been reported to improve glucose metabolism.
Testosterone replacement therapy has been reported to improve some or all of the components of the MetS.
Recent reports indicate that a certain ROS concentration is required for high-dose vitamin C to induce cytotoxicity in cancer cells.
The generation of ascorbyl- and H2O2 radicals by PAA increases ROS stress in cancer cells
In this study, we report that PAA is efficacious in killing MM cells in vitro and in vivo models, which generated levels of 20–40 mM ascorbate and 500 nM ascorbyl radicals after intraperitoneal administration of 4 g ascorbate per kilogram of body weight (Chen et al., 2008Chen et al., 2008), in xenograft MM mice
These data suggest that PAA may show a therapeutic advantage to blood cancers vs solid tumors because of the communication between tumor cells and blood plasma
These results strongly suggest that the mechanism of PAA killing of MM cells is indeed iron-dependent
These results suggest that PAA administration in SMM may be able to prevent progression to symtomatic MM
A recent study by Yun and colleagues demonstrated that vitamin C selectively kills KRAS and BRAF mutant colorectal cancer cells by targeting GAPDH, but spares normal cells
RAS family genes show the most frequent mutations in MM. KRAS, NRAS and BRAF are mutated in 22%, 20% and 7% of MM samples
the disease stage rather than the mutation of RAS and/or BRAF is the major predictive factor for PAA sensitivity in MM treatment
Other molecular mechanisms including ATP depletion and ATM-AMPK signaling have been reported to explain PAA-induced cell death
our pilot study also suggested that PAA could overcome drug resistance to bortezomib in MM cells
Our findings complement reported studies and further address the mechanism of action using clinical samples in which we observed that PAA killed tumor cells with high iron content, suggesting that iron might be the initiator of PAA cytotoxicity
combination of PAA with standard therapeutic drugs, such as melphalan, may significantly reduce the dose of melphalan needed
Combined treatment of reduced dose melphalan with PAA achieved a significantly longer progression-free survival than the same dose of melphalan alone.
These data also suggest that the bone marrow suppression induced by high-dose melphalan can be ameliorated by the combination of PAA with lower dose of melphalan because of the lack of toxicity of PAA on normal cells with low iron content.
if creatinine clearance is <30 mL/min, high dose ascorbic acid should be not administrated.
In MM preclinical and clinical studies, ascorbate was used as an adjunct drug and showed controversial results (Harvey et al., 2009, Perrone et al., 2009, Held et al., 2013, Sharma et al., 2012, Nakano et al., 2011, Takahashi, 2010, Sharma et al., 2009, Qazilbash et al., 2008). However, none of these tests used pharmacological doses of ascorbate and intravenous administration
Multiple myeloma (MM) is a plasma cell neoplasm.
Cameron and Pauling reported that high doses of vitamin C increased survival of patients with cancer
pharmacologically dosed ascorbic acid (PAA) 50–100 g (Chen et al., 2008, Padayatty et al., 2004, Hoffer et al., 2008, Padayatty et al., 2006, Welsh et al., 2013), administered intravenously, has potent anti-cancer activity and its role as anti-cancer therapy is being studied at the University of Iowa and in other centers
In the presence of catalytic metal ions like iron, PAA administered intravenously exerts pro-oxidant effects leading to the formation of highly reactive oxygen species (ROS), resulting in cell death
the labile iron pool (LIP) is significantly elevated in MM cells
The survival of CD138+ cells in vitro was significantly decreased following PAA treatment in all 9 MM
In contrast, no significant change of cell viability was observed in CD138− BM cells from the same patients
The same effect of PAA was also observed in the SMM patients
no response to PAA was detected in CD138+ cells from the 2 MGUS patients
the combination of melphalan plus PAA showed greater tumor burden reduction than each drug alone, suggesting a synergistic activity between these two drugs
Both catalase and NAC protect cells from oxidative damage
cells pretreated with NAC and catalase became resistant to PAA even at high doses
adding deferoxamine (DFO), an iron chelator, to OCI-MY5 cells before PAA treatment was also sufficient to prevent PAA-induced cellular death
iron is essential for PAA to achieve its anti-cancer activity
PAA induced early necrosis (Fig. 3Fig. 3A, 60 min) followed by late apoptosis
results further indicated that PAA induced mitochondria-mediated apoptosis
PAA by reacting with LIP and generating ROS induces mitochondria-mediated apoptosis in which AIF1 cleavage is important for cell death.
ROS and H2O2 are well known factors mediating PAA-induced cancer cell death
animal study finds high-dose, pharmacologic vitamin C found to kill multiple myeloma cells via pro-oxidant effect found in similar studies in dealing with different cancers.
Chen et al. have revealed that ascorbate at pharmacologic concentrations (0.3–20 mM) achieved only by intravenously (i.v.) administration selectively kills a variety of cancer cell lines in vitro, but has little cytotoxic effect on normal cells.
Ascorbic acid (the reduced form of vitamin C) is specifically transported into cells by sodium-dependent vitamin C transporters (SVCTs)
SVCT-1 is predominantly expressed in epithelial tissues
differential sensitivity to VC may result from variations in VC flow into cells, which is dependent on SVCT-2 expression.
high-dose VC significantly impaired both the tumorspheres initiation (Fig. 4d, e) and the growth of established tumorspheres derived from HCC cells (Fig. 4f, g) in a time-dependent and dose-dependent manner.
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)
The antioxidant, N-acetyl-L-cysteine (NAC), preventing VC-induced ROS production (a ROS scavenger), completely restored the viability and colony formation among VC-treated cells
DNA double-strand damage was found following VC treatment
DNA damage was prevented by NAC
Interestingly, the combination of VC and cisplatin was even more effective in reducing tumor growth and weight
Consistent with the in vitro results, stemness-related genes expressions in tumor xenograft were remarkably reduced after VC or VC+cisplatin treatment, whereas conventional cisplatin therapy alone led to the increase of CSCs
VC is one of the numerous common hepatoprotectants.
Interestingly, at extracellular concentrations greater than 1 mM, VC induces strong cytotoxicity to cancer cells including liver cancer cells
we hypothesized that intravenous VC might reduce the risk of recurrence in HCC patients after curative liver resection.
Intriguingly, the 5-year disease-free survival (DFS) for patients who received intravenous VC was 24%, as opposed to 15% for no intravenous VC-treated patients
Median DFS time for VC users was 25.2 vs. 18 months for VC non-users
intravenous VC use is linked to improved DFS in HCC patients.
In this study, based on the elevated expression of SVCT-2, which is responsible for VC uptake, in liver CSCs, we revealed that clinically achievable concentrations of VC preferentially eradicated liver CSCs in vitro and in vivo
the authors here made similar mistakes to the Mayo authors i.e. under doses here in this study. They dosed at only 2 grams IVC. A woefully low dose of IVC.
Additionally, we found that intravenous VC reduced the risk of post-surgical HCC progression in a retrospective cohort study.
Their comfort zone was 1mM. They should have targeted 20-40 mM.
Three hundred thirty-nine participants (55.3%) received 2 g intravenous VC for 4 or more days after initial hepatectomy
As the key protein responsible for VC uptake in the liver, SVCT-2 played crucial roles in regulating the sensitivity to ascorbate-induced cytotoxicity
we also observed that SVCT-2 was highly expressed in human HCC samples and preferentially elevated in liver CSCs
SVCT-2 might serve as a potential CSC marker and therapeutic target in HCC
CSCs play critical roles in regulating tumor initiation, relapse, and chemoresistance
we revealed that VC treatment dramatically reduced the self-renewal ability, expression levels of CSC-associated genes, and percentages of CSCs in HCC, indicating that CSCs were more susceptible to VC-induced cell death
as a drug for eradicating CSCs, VC may represent a promising strategy for treatment of HCC, alone or particularly in combination with chemotherapeutic drugs
In HCC, we found that VC-generated ROS caused genotoxic stress (DNA damage) and metabolic stress (ATP depletion), which further activated the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21, leading to G2/M phase cell cycle arrest and caspase-dependent apoptosis in HCC cells
we demonstrated a synergistic effect of VC and chemotherapeutic drug cisplatin on killing HCC both in vitro and in vivo
Intravenous VC has also been reported to reduce chemotherapy-associated toxicity of carboplatin and paclitaxel in patients,38 but the specific mechanism needs further investigation
Terribly inadequate dose. Target is 20-40 mM which other studies have found occur with 50-75 grams of IVC.
several clinical trials of high-dose intravenous VC have been conducted in patients with advanced cancer and have revealed improved quality of life and prolonged OS
high-dose VC was not toxic to immune cells and major immune cell subpopulations in vivo
high recurrence rate and heterogeneity
tumor progression, metastasis, and chemotherapy-resistance
SVCT-2 was highly expressed in HCC samples in comparison to peri-tumor tissues
high expression (grade 2+/3+) of SVCT-2 was in agreement with poorer overall survival (OS) of HCC patients (Fig. 1c) and more aggressive tumor behavior
SVCT-2 is enriched in liver CSCs
these data suggest that SVCT-2 is preferentially expressed in liver CSCs and is required for the maintenance of liver CSCs.
pharmacologic concentrations of plasma VC higher than 0.3 mM are achievable only from i.v. administration
The viabilities of HCC cells were dramatically decreased after exposure to VC in dose-dependent manner
VC and cisplatin combination further caused cell apoptosis in tumor xenograft
These results verify that VC inhibits tumor growth in HCC PDX models and SVCT-2 expression level is associated with VC response
qPCR and IHC analysis demonstrated that expression levels of CSC-associated genes and percentages of CSCs in PDXs dramatically declined after VC treatment, confirming the inhibitory role of VC in liver CSCs
IV vitamin C in vitro and in vivo found to "preferentially" eradicate cancer stem cells. In addition, IV vitamin C was found to be adjunctive to chemotherapy, found to be hepatoprotectant. This study also looked at SVCT-2, which is the transport protein important in liver C uptake.
Oxidative slow-twitch type I fibres (henceforth briefly called ‘slow fibres’) contain MHC-Iβ. They use oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) to generate ATP and are thus highly fatigue resistant and preferentially activated during endurance exercise. Slow fibres comprise high amounts of mitochondria, myoglobin and lipid droplets, and are well supplied by capillaries
there are three types of fast-twitch fibres (types IIA, IID/X, IIB, with the corresponding MHC isoforms IIa, IId/x, IIb) which are all used for rapid high-force generation. Oxidative-glycolytic fast-twitch type IIA fibres have intermediate amounts of mitochondria, lipid droplets and capillaries, and are intermediately resistant to fatigue (as compared to type I and types IIB and IID/X). Glycolytic fast-twitch type IID/X fibres are poor in mitochondria, lipids and capillaries and more susceptible to fatique than type IIA. Glycolytic fast-twitch type IIB fibres have the lowest amounts of mitochondria, lipid droplets and capillaries, but generate the highest contraction velocities
Several studies have shown that PGC-1α is upregulated after endurance training
upregulation of PGC-1α expression enhances and/or maintains mitochondrial biogenesis, eventually leading to an increased mitochondrial content of the muscle fibres.
PGC-1α also plays an important role in the pathogenesis of insulin resistance and T2D
carriers of the Gly482Ser SNP have a reduced cardiorespiratory fitness and a higher risk for metabolic syndrome and T2D
Those that carry the risk SNP for Gly482Ser for the PGC-1alpha gene dont' transform type II to type I and thus decrease the effectiveness of aeorbic exercise training, decreased oxidative phosphorylation, decreased lipid oxidation, increased lipid accumulaiton in muscle, and increased risk of IR, obesity, and diabetes.
Vitamin C was ~10 times more potent than 2-DG for the targeting of CSCs
Cancer stem-like cells (CSCs) are thought to be the root cause of chemotherapy-resistance and radio-resistance
ultimately leading to treatment failure in patients with advanced disease [1-3]. They have been directly implicated mechanistically in tumor recurrence and metastasis, resulting in poor patient survival
mitochondrial biogenesis may be a key driver of the CSC phenotype
Our results indicate that increased mitochondrial oxidative stress and high NADH levels are both key characteristics of the CSC metabolic phenotype
high levels of NAD(P)H auto-fluorescence are known to be a surrogate marker for mitochondrial “power”, high OXPHOS capacity and increased ATP production
CSCs may be strictly dependent on NAD(P)H to maintain their enhanced mitochondrial function
an intact NAD+ salvage pathway is strictly required for mammosphere formation, supporting our results using NAD(P)H auto-fluorescence, which enriched CSC activity by more than 5-fold.
Since glycolysis is especially critical for maintaining the TCA cycle, OXPHOS and overall mitochondrial function, we next assessed the effects of known glycolytic inhibitors
we show that two other natural products that function as effective glycolysis inhibitors, also inhibited mammosphere formation. More specifically, vitamin C (ascorbic acid), which induces oxidative stress and inhibits the activity of GAPDH (a key glycolytic enzyme) [17], also inhibited mammosphere formation, with an IC-50 of 1 mM (Figure 7B). Therefore, vitamin C was ~10 times more potent than 2-DG at targeting CSC propagation
silibinin (the major active constituent of silymarin, an extract of milk thistle seeds) [18], which specifically functions as an inhibitor of glucose uptake, blocked mammosphere formation, with an IC-50 between 200 and 400 µM
caffeic acid phenyl ester (CAPE), a key component of honey-bee propolis, has potent anti-cancer properties
Propolis has a strong history of medicinal use, dating back more than 2,000 years
Because of it aromatic ring structure (Figure 8), we speculated that CAPE might function as a potent inhibitor of oxidative mitochondrial metabolism
CAPE quantitatively inhibits the mitochondrial oxygen consumption rate (OCR) and, in turn, induces the onset of aerobic glycolysis (ECAR)
CAPE shows a clear selectivity for targeting CSCs and adherent cancer cells, relative to normal fibroblasts.
CAPE functions as a “natural” mitochondrial OXPHOS inhibitor, that preferentially targets the CSC sub-population. This could explain CAPE’s known anti-cancer properties
Our data directly shows that a small fraction of the total cell population, characterized by increased PGC1α activity, high mitochondrial ROS/H2O2 and high NADH levels, has the ability to survive and grow under anchorage-independent conditions, driving mammosphere formation
We highlight the utility of certain natural products, such as Silibinin, Vitamin C and CAPE, that could be used to therapeutically target CSCs. Silibinin is the major active component of silymarin, which is an extract prepared from milk thistle seeds.
high NADH is a property that is conserved between normal and cancerous stem cells
Previous studies have also shown that when non-CSCs and CSCs are both fed mitochondrial fuels (such as L-lactate or ketone bodies), that CSCs quantitatively produce more NADH in response to this stimulus
CSCs may be strictly dependent on NADH to maintain their enhanced mitochondrial function
The Noble Prize winner, Linus Pauling, was among the first to describe and clinically test the efficacy of Vitamin C, as a relatively non-toxic anti-cancer agent
Vitamin C has two mechanisms of action. First, it is a potent pro-oxidant, that actively depletes the reduced glutathione pool, leading to cellular oxidative stress and apoptosis in cancer cells. Moreover, it also behaves as an inhibitor of glycolysis, by targeting the activity of GAPDH, a key glycolytic enzyme.
Here, we show that Vitamin C can also be used to target the CSC population, as it is an inhibitor of energy metabolism that feeds into the mitochondrial TCA cycle and OXPHOS
Vitamin C may prove to be promising agent for new clinical trials, aimed at testing its ability to reduce CSC activity in cancer patients, as an add-on to more conventional therapies, to prevent tumor recurrence, further disease progression and metastasis
Interestingly, a breast cancer based clinical study has already shown that the use of Vitamin C, concurrent with or within 6 months of chemotherapy, significantly reduces both tumor recurrence and patient mortality
CAPE quantitatively reduces mitochondrial oxygen consumption (OCR), while inducing a reactive increase in glycolysis (ECAR). As such, it potently inhibits mammosphere formation with an IC-50 of ~2.5 µM. Similarly, it also significantly inhibits cell migration
we also demonstrate that 7 different inhibitors of key energetic pathways can be used to effectively block CSC propagation, including three natural products (silibinin, ascorbic acid and CAPE). Future studies will be necessary to test their potential for clinical benefit in cancer patients.
The future of cancer therapy is cancer stem cells. Study finds that Vitamin C, silymarin, and bee propolis blocks mitochondrial energy pathways in cancer stem cells. Vitamin C is a known glycolytic inhbitor. Vitamin C was found to inhibit glycolysis via GAPDH targeting to inhibit the energy pathways of the mitochondria in CSCs. The authors propse that Vitamin C can be used as add on therapies for conventional therapies to specifically attack the CSCs and their contribution to recrurence, treatment resistance, and metastasis potential all in addition to the ability of vitamin C to reduce the side effects of chemotherapy.
metabolic activity, oxygen transport, and DNA synthesis
Iron is found in the human body in the form of haemoglobin in red blood cells and growing erythroid cells.
macrophages contain considerable quantities of iron
iron is taken up by the majority of cells in the form of a transferrin (Tf)-Fe(III) complex that binds to the cell surface receptor transferrin receptor 1 (TfR1)
excess iron is retained in the liver cells
the endosomal six transmembrane epithelial antigen of the prostate 3 (STEAP3) reduces Fe(III) (ferric ion) to Fe(II) (ferrous ion), which is subsequently transferred across the endosomal membrane by divalent metal transporter 1 (DMT1)
labile iron pool (LIP)
LIP is toxic to the cells owing to the production of massive amounts of ROS.
DHA is quickly converted to Vit-C within the cell, by interacting with reduced glutathione (GSH) [45,46,47]. NADPH then recycles the oxidized glutathione (glutathione disulfide (GSSG)) and converts it back into GSH
Fe(II) catalyzes the formation of OH• and OH− during the interaction between H2O2 and O2•− (Haber–Weiss reaction)
Ascorbate can efficiently reduce free iron, thus recycling the cellular Fe(II)/Fe(III) to produce more OH• from H2O2 than can be generated during the Fenton reaction, which ultimately leads to lipid, protein, and DNA oxidation
Vit-C-stimulated iron absorption
reduce cellular iron efflux
high-dose Vit-C may elevate cellular LIP concentrations
ascorbate enhanced cancer cell LIP specifically by generating H2O2
Vit-C produces H2O2 extracellularly, which in turn inhibits tumor cells immediately
tumor cells have a need for readily available Fe(II) to survive and proliferate.
Tf has been recognized to sequester most labile Fe(II) in vivo
Asc•− and H2O2 were generated in vivo upon i.v Vit-C administration of around 0.5 g/kg of body weight and that the generation was Vit-C-dose reliant
free irons, especially Fe(II), increase Vit-C autoxidation, leading to H2O2 production
iron metabolism is altered in malignancies
increase in the expression of various iron-intake pathways or the downregulation of iron exporter proteins and storage pathways
Fe(II) ion in breast cancer cells is almost double that in normal breast tissues
macrophages in the cancer microenvironment have been revealed to increase iron shedding
Advanced breast tumor patients had substantially greater Fe(II) levels in their blood than the control groups without the disease
increased the amount of LIP inside the cells through transferrin receptor (TfR)
Warburg effect, or metabolic reprogramming,
Warburg effect is aided by KRAS or BRAF mutations
Vit-C is supplied, it oxidizes to DHA, and then is readily transported by GLUT-1 in mutant cells of KRAS or BRAF competing with glucose [46]. DHA is quickly converted into ascorbate inside the cell by NADPH and GSH [46,107]. This decrease reduces the concentration of cytosolic antioxidants and raises the intracellular ROS amounts
ROS activates poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP), which depletes NAD+ (a critical co-factor of GAPDH); thus, further reducing the GAPDH associated with a multifaceted metabolic rewiring
Hindering GAPDH can result in an “energy crisis”, due to the decrease in ATP production
high-dose Vit-C recruited metabolites and increased the enzymatic activity in the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP), blocked the tri-carboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, and increased oxygen uptake, disrupting the intracellular metabolic balance and resulting in irreversible cell death, due to an energy crisis
mega-dose Vit-C influences energy metabolism by producing tremendous amounts of H2O2
Due to its great volatility at neutral pH [76], bolus therapy with mega-dose DHA has only transitory effects on tumor cells, both in vitro and in vivo.