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      Application of Mono- and Disaccharides in Drug Targeting and Efficacy

      1 , 1 , 2 , 3 , 1
      ChemMedChem
      Wiley

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          Is Open Access

          Targeting cellular metabolism to improve cancer therapeutics

          The metabolic properties of cancer cells diverge significantly from those of normal cells. Energy production in cancer cells is abnormally dependent on aerobic glycolysis. In addition to the dependency on glycolysis, cancer cells have other atypical metabolic characteristics such as increased fatty acid synthesis and increased rates of glutamine metabolism. Emerging evidence shows that many features characteristic to cancer cells, such as dysregulated Warburg-like glucose metabolism, fatty acid synthesis and glutaminolysis are linked to therapeutic resistance in cancer treatment. Therefore, targeting cellular metabolism may improve the response to cancer therapeutics and the combination of chemotherapeutic drugs with cellular metabolism inhibitors may represent a promising strategy to overcome drug resistance in cancer therapy. Recently, several review articles have summarized the anticancer targets in the metabolic pathways and metabolic inhibitor-induced cell death pathways, however, the dysregulated metabolism in therapeutic resistance, which is a highly clinical relevant area in cancer metabolism research, has not been specifically addressed. From this unique angle, this review article will discuss the relationship between dysregulated cellular metabolism and cancer drug resistance and how targeting of metabolic enzymes, such as glucose transporters, hexokinase, pyruvate kinase M2, lactate dehydrogenase A, pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase, fatty acid synthase and glutaminase can enhance the efficacy of common therapeutic agents or overcome resistance to chemotherapy or radiotherapy.
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            Galectins as modulators of tumour progression.

            Galectins are a family of animal lectins with diverse biological activities. They function both extracellularly, by interacting with cell-surface and extracellular matrix glycoproteins and glycolipids, and intracellularly, by interacting with cytoplasmic and nuclear proteins to modulate signalling pathways. Current research indicates that galectins have important roles in cancer; they contribute to neoplastic transformation, tumour cell survival, angiogenesis and tumour metastasis. They can modulate the immune and inflammatory responses and might have a key role helping tumours to escape immune surveillance. How do the different members of the Galectin family contribute to these diverse aspects of tumour biology?
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              Lectins: Carbohydrate-Specific Proteins That Mediate Cellular Recognition.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                ChemMedChem
                ChemMedChem
                Wiley
                18607179
                April 23 2018
                April 23 2018
                March 07 2018
                : 13
                : 8
                : 764-778
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Pharmaceutical Sciences; Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine; E. 232 University Town, Waihuan Road Panyu Guangzhou 510006 China
                [2 ]College of Horticulture; South China Agricultural University; 483 Wushan Road Guangzhou 510642 China
                [3 ]College of Science; Hunan Agricultural University; Furong Road Changsha 410128 China
                Article
                10.1002/cmdc.201700762
                edb2413a-2fec-466a-8699-19ede8da71c1
                © 2018

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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