http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/15/magazine/warburg-effect-an-old-idea-revived-starve-cancer-to-death.html?_r=0
he story of modern cancer research begins, somewhat improbably, with the sea urchin. In the first decade of the 20th century, the German biologist Theodor Boveri discovered that if he fertilized sea-urchin eggs with two sperm rather than one, some of the cells would end up with the wrong number of chromosomes and fail to develop properly. It was the era before modern genetics, but Boveri was aware that cancer cells, like the deformed sea urchin cells, had abnormal chromosomes; whatever caused cancer, he surmised, had something to do with chromosomes.
he story of modern cancer research begins, somewhat improbably, with the sea urchin. In the first decade of the 20th century, the German biologist Theodor Boveri discovered that if he fertilized sea-urchin eggs with two sperm rather than one, some of the cells would end up with the wrong number of chromosomes and fail to develop properly. It was the era before modern genetics, but Boveri was aware that cancer cells, like the deformed sea urchin cells, had abnormal chromosomes; whatever caused cancer, he surmised, had something to do with chromosomes.
Today
Boveri is celebrated for discovering the origins of cancer, but another
German scientist, Otto Warburg, was studying sea-urchin eggs around the
same time as Boveri. His research, too, was hailed as a major
breakthrough in our understanding of cancer. But in the following
decades, Warburg’s discovery would largely disappear from the cancer
narrative, his contributions considered so negligible that they were
left out of textbooks altogether.
Unlike
Boveri, Warburg wasn’t interested in the chromosomes of sea-urchin
eggs. Rather, Warburg was focused on energy, specifically on how the
eggs fueled their growth. By the time Warburg turned his attention from
sea-urchin cells to the cells of a rat tumor, in 1923, he knew that
sea-urchin eggs increased their oxygen consumption significantly as they
grew, so he expected to see a similar need for extra oxygen in the rat
tumor. Instead, the cancer cells fueled their growth by swallowing up
enormous amounts of glucose (blood sugar) and breaking it down without
oxygen. The result made no sense. Oxygen-fueled reactions are a much
more efficient way of turning food into energy, and there was plenty of
oxygen available for the cancer cells to use. But when Warburg tested
additional tumors, including ones from humans, he saw the same effect
every time. The cancer cells were ravenous for glucose.
Warburg’s
discovery, later named the Warburg effect, is estimated to occur in up
to 80 percent of cancers. It is so fundamental to most cancers that a
positron emission tomography (PET) scan, which has emerged as an
important tool in the staging and diagnosis of cancer, works simply by
revealing the places in the body where cells are consuming extra
glucose. In many cases, the more glucose a tumor consumes, the worse a
patient’s prognosis.
In
the years following his breakthrough, Warburg became convinced that the
Warburg effect occurs because cells are unable to use oxygen properly
and that this damaged respiration is, in effect, the starting point of
cancer. Well into the 1950s, this theory — which Warburg believed in
until his death in 1970 but never proved — remained an important subject
of debate within the field. And then, more quickly than anyone could
have anticipated, the debate ended. In 1953, James Watson and Francis
Crick pieced together the structure of the DNA molecule and set the
stage for the triumph of molecular biology’s gene-centered approach to
cancer. In the following decades, scientists came to regard cancer as a
disease governed by mutated genes, which drive cells into a state of
relentless division and proliferation. The metabolic catalysts that
Warburg spent his career analyzing began to be referred to as
“housekeeping enzymes” — necessary to keep a cell going but largely
irrelevant to the deeper story of cancer.
“It
was a stampede,” says Thomas Seyfried, a biologist at Boston College,
of the move to molecular biology. “Warburg was dropped like a hot
potato.” There was every reason to think that Warburg would remain at
best a footnote in the history of cancer research. (As Dominic
D’Agostino, an associate professor at the University of South Florida
Morsani College of Medicine, told me, “The book that my students have to
use for their cancer biology course has no mention of cancer
metabolism.”) But over the past decade, and the past five years in
particular, something unexpected happened: Those housekeeping enzymes
have again become one of the most promising areas of cancer research.
Scientists now wonder if metabolism could prove to be the long-sought
“Achilles’ heel” of cancer, a common weak point in a disease that
manifests itself in so many different forms.
There
are typically many mutations in a single cancer. But there are a
limited number of ways that the body can produce energy and support
rapid growth. Cancer cells rely on these fuels in a way that healthy
cells don’t. The hope of scientists at the forefront of the Warburg
revival is that they will be able to slow — or even stop — tumors by
disrupting one or more of the many chemical reactions a cell uses to
proliferate, and, in the process, starve cancer cells of the nutrients
they desperately need to grow.
Even
James Watson, one of the fathers of molecular biology, is convinced
that targeting metabolism is a more promising avenue in current cancer
research than gene-centered approaches. At his office at the Cold Spring
Harbor Laboratory in Long Island, Watson, 88, sat beneath one of the
original sketches of the DNA molecule and told me that locating the
genes that cause cancer has been “remarkably unhelpful” — the belief
that sequencing your DNA is going to extend your life “a cruel
illusion.” If he were going into cancer research today, Watson said, he
would study biochemistry rather than molecular biology.
“I
never thought, until about two months ago, I’d ever have to learn the
Krebs cycle,” he said, referring to the reactions, familiar to most
high-school biology students, by which a cell powers itself. “Now I
realize I have to.”
Born in 1883
into the illustrious Warburg family, Otto Warburg was raised to be a
science prodigy. His father, Emil, was one of Germany’s leading
physicists, and many of the world’s greatest physicists and chemists,
including Albert Einstein and Max Planck, were friends of the family.
(When Warburg enlisted in the military during World War I, Einstein sent
him a letter urging him to come home for the sake of science.) Those
men had explained the mysteries of the universe with a handful of
fundamental laws, and the young Warburg came to believe he could bring
that same elegant simplicity and clarity to the workings of life. Long
before his death, Warburg was considered perhaps the greatest biochemist
of the 20th century, a man whose research was vital to our
understanding not only of cancer but also of respiration and
photosynthesis. In 1931 he won the Nobel Prize for his work on
respiration, and he was considered for the award on two other occasions —
each time for a different discovery. Records indicate that he would
have won in 1944, had the Nazis not forbidden the acceptance of the
Nobel by German citizens.
That
Warburg was able to live in Germany and continue his research
throughout World War II, despite having Jewish ancestry and most likely
being gay, speaks to the German obsession with cancer in the first half
of the 20th century. At the time, cancer was more prevalent in Germany
than in almost any other nation. According to the Stanford historian
Robert Proctor, by the 1920s Germany’s escalating cancer rates had
become a “major scandal.” A number of top Nazis, including Hitler, are
believed to have harbored a particular dread of the disease; Hitler and
Joseph Goebbels took the time to discuss new advances in cancer research
in the hours leading up to the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union.
Whether Hitler was personally aware of Warburg’s research is unknown,
but one of Warburg’s former colleagues wrote that several sources told
him that “Hitler’s entourage” became convinced that “Warburg was the
only scientist who offered a serious hope of producing a cure for cancer
one day.”
Although
many Jewish scientists fled Germany during the 1930s, Warburg chose to
remain. According to his biographer, the Nobel Prize-winning biochemist
Hans Krebs, who worked in Warburg’s lab, “science was the dominant
emotion” of Warburg’s adult life, “virtually subjugating all other
emotions.” In Krebs’s telling, Warburg spent years building a small team
of specially trained technicians who knew how to run his experiments,
and he feared that his mission to defeat cancer would be set back
significantly if he had to start over. But after the war, Warburg fired
all the technicians, suspecting that they had reported his criticisms of
the Third Reich to the Gestapo. Warburg’s reckless decision to stay in
Nazi Germany most likely came down to his astonishing ego. (Upon
learning he had won the Nobel Prize, Warburg’s response was, “It’s high
time.”)
“Modesty
was not a virtue of Otto Warburg,” says George Klein, a 90-year-old
cancer researcher at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden. As a young man,
Klein was asked to send cancer cells to Warburg’s lab. A number of
years later, Klein’s boss approached Warburg for a recommendation on
Klein’s behalf. “George Klein has made a very important contribution to
cancer research,” Warburg wrote. “He has sent me the cells with which I
have solved the cancer problem.” Klein also recalls the lecture Warburg
gave in Stockholm in 1950 at the 50th anniversary of the Nobel Prize.
Warburg drew four diagrams on a blackboard explaining the Warburg
effect, and then told the members of the audience that they represented
all that they needed to know about the biochemistry of cancer.
Warburg
was so monumentally stubborn that he refused to use the word
“mitochondria,” even after it had been widely accepted as the name for
the tiny structures that power cells. Instead Warburg persisted in
calling them “grana,” the term he came up with when he identified those
structures as the site of cellular respiration. Few things would have
been more upsetting to him than the thought of Nazi thugs chasing him
out of the beautiful Berlin institute, modeled after a country manor and
built specifically for him. After the war, the Russians approached
Warburg and offered to erect a new institute in Moscow. Klein recalls
that Warburg told them with great pride that both Hitler and Stalin had
failed to move him. As Warburg explained to his sister: “Ich war vor
Hitler da” — “I was here before Hitler.”
Imagine two
engines, the one being driven by complete and the other by incomplete
combustion of coal,” Warburg wrote in 1956, responding to a criticism of
his hypothesis that cancer is a problem of energy. “A man who knows
nothing at all about engines, their structure and their purpose may
discover the difference. He may, for example, smell it.”
The
“complete combustion,” in Warburg’s analogy, is respiration. The
“incomplete combustion,” turning nutrients into energy without oxygen,
is known as fermentation. Fermentation provides a useful backup when
oxygen can’t reach cells quickly enough to keep up with demand. (Our
muscle cells turn to fermentation during intense exercise.) Warburg
thought that defects prevent cancer cells from being able to use
respiration, but scientists now widely agree that this is wrong. A
growing tumor can be thought of as a construction site, and as today’s
researchers explain it, the Warburg effect opens the gates for more and
more trucks to deliver building materials (in the form of glucose
molecules) to make “daughter” cells.
If
this theory can explain the “why” of the Warburg effect, it still
leaves the more pressing question of what, exactly, sets a cell on the
path to the Warburg effect and cancer. Scientists at several of the
nation’s top cancer hospitals have spearheaded the Warburg revival, in
hopes of finding the answer. These researchers, typically molecular
biologists by training, have turned to metabolism and the Warburg effect
because their own research led each of them to the same conclusion: A
number of the cancer-causing genes that have long been known for their
role in cell division also regulate cells’ consumption of nutrients.
Craig
Thompson, the president and chief executive of the Memorial Sloan
Kettering Cancer Center, has been among the most outspoken proponents of
this renewed focus on metabolism. In Thompson’s analogy, the Warburg
effect can be thought of as a social failure: a breakdown of the
nutrient-sharing agreement that single-celled organisms signed when they
joined forces to become multicellular organisms. His research showed
that cells need to receive instructions from other cells to eat, just as
they require instructions from other cells to divide. Thompson
hypothesized that if he could identify the mutations that lead a cell to
eat more glucose than it should, it would go a long way toward
explaining how the Warburg effect and cancer begin. But Thompson’s
search for those mutations didn’t lead to an entirely new discovery.
Instead, it led him to AKT, a gene already well known to molecular
biologists for its role in promoting cell division. Thompson now
believes AKT plays an even more fundamental role in metabolism.
Continue reading the main story
The
protein created by AKT is part of a chain of signaling proteins that is
mutated in up to 80 percent of all cancers. Thompson says that once
these proteins go into overdrive, a cell no longer worries about signals
from other cells to eat; it instead stuffs itself with glucose.
Thompson discovered he could induce the “full Warburg effect” simply by
placing an activated AKT protein into a normal cell. When that happens,
Thompson says, the cells begin to do what every single-celled organism
will do in the presence of food: eat as much as it can and make as many
copies of itself as possible. When Thompson presents his research to
high-school students, he shows them a slide of mold spreading across a
piece of bread. The slide’s heading — “Everyone’s first cancer
experiment” — recalls Warburg’s observation that cancer cells will carry
out fermentation at almost the same rate of wildly growing yeasts.
Just
as Thompson has redefined the role of AKT, Chi Van Dang, director of
the Abramson Cancer Center at the University of Pennsylvania, has helped
lead the cancer world to an appreciation of how one widely studied gene
can profoundly influence a tumor’s metabolism. In 1997, Dang became one
of the first scientists to connect molecular biology to the science of
cellular metabolism when he demonstrated that MYC — a so-called
regulator gene well known for its role in cell proliferation — directly
targets an enzyme that can turn on the Warburg effect. Dang recalls that
other researchers were skeptical of his interest in a housekeeping
enzyme, but he stuck with it because he came to appreciate something
critical: Cancer cells can’t stop eating.
Unlike
healthy cells, growing cancer cells are missing the internal feedback
loops that are designed to conserve resources when food isn’t available.
They’re “addicted to nutrients,” Dang says; when they can’t consume
enough, they begin to die. The addiction to nutrients explains why
changes to metabolic pathways are so common and tend to arise first as a
cell progresses toward cancer: It’s not that other types of alterations
can’t arise first, but rather that, when they do, the incipient tumors
lack the access to the nutrients they need to grow. Dang uses the
analogy of a work crew trying to put up a building. “If you don’t have
enough cement, and you try to put a lot of bricks together, you’re going
to collapse,” he says.
Metabolism-centered
therapies have produced some tantalizing successes. Agios
Pharmaceuticals, a company co-founded by Thompson, is now testing a drug
that treats cases of acute myelogenous leukemia that have been
resistant to other therapies by inhibiting the mutated versions of the
metabolic enzyme IDH 2. In clinical trials of the Agios drug, nearly 40
percent of patients who carry these mutations are experiencing at least
partial remissions.
Researchers
working in a lab run by Peter Pedersen, a professor of biochemistry at
Johns Hopkins, discovered that a compound known as 3-bromopyruvate can
block energy production in cancer cells and, at least in rats and
rabbits, wipe out advanced liver cancer. (Trials of the drug have yet to
begin.) At Penn, Dang and his colleagues are now trying to block
multiple metabolic pathways at the same time. In mice, this two-pronged
approach has been able to shrink some tumors without debilitating side
effects. Dang says the hope is not necessarily to find a cure but rather
to keep cancer at bay in a “smoldering quiet state,” much as patients
treat their hypertension.
Warburg,
too, appreciated that a tumor’s dependence upon a steady flow of
nutrients might eventually prove to be its fatal weakness. Long after
his initial discovery of the Warburg effect, he continued to research
the enzymes involved in fermentation and to explore the possibility of
blocking the process in cancer cells. The challenge Warburg faced then
is the same one that metabolism researchers face today: Cancer is an
incredibly persistent foe. Blocking one metabolic pathway has been shown
to slow down and even stop tumor growth in some cases, but tumors tend
to find another way. “You block glucose, they use glutamine,” Dang says,
in reference to another primary fuel used by cancers. “You block
glucose and glutamine, they might be able to use fatty acids. We don’t
know yet.”
Given
Warburg’s own story of historical neglect, it’s fitting that what may
turn out to be one of the most promising cancer metabolism drugs has
been sitting in plain sight for decades. That drug, metformin, is
already widely prescribed to decrease the glucose in the blood of
diabetics (76.9 million metformin prescriptions were filled in the
United States in 2014). In the years ahead, it’s likely to be used to
treat — or at least to prevent — some cancers. Because metformin can
influence a number of metabolic pathways, the precise mechanism by which
it achieves its anticancer effects remains a source of debate. But the
results of numerous epidemiological studies have been striking.
Diabetics taking metformin seem to be significantly less likely to
develop cancer than diabetics who don’t — and significantly less likely
to die from the disease when they do.
Near
the end of his life, Warburg grew obsessed with his diet. He believed
that most cancer was preventable and thought that chemicals added to
food and used in agriculture could cause tumors by interfering with
respiration. He stopped eating bread unless it was baked in his own
home. He would drink milk only if it came from a special herd of cows,
and used a centrifuge at his lab to make his cream and butter.
Warburg’s
personal diet is unlikely to become a path to prevention. But the
Warburg revival has allowed researchers to develop a hypothesis for how
the diets that are linked to our obesity and diabetes epidemics —
specifically, sugar-heavy diets that can result in permanently elevated
levels of the hormone insulin — may also be driving cells to the Warburg
effect and cancer.
The
insulin hypothesis can be traced to the research of Lewis Cantley, the
director of the Meyer Cancer Center at Weill Cornell Medical College. In
the 1980s, Cantley discovered how insulin, which is released by the
pancreas and tells cells to take up glucose, influences what happens
inside a cell. Cantley now refers to insulin and a closely related
hormone, IGF-1 (insulinlike growth factor 1), as “the champion”
activators of metabolic proteins linked to cancer. He’s beginning to see
evidence, he says, that in some cases, “it really is insulin itself
that’s getting the tumor started.” One way to think about the Warburg
effect, says Cantley, is as the insulin, or IGF-1, signaling pathway
“gone awry — it’s cells behaving as though insulin were telling it to
take up glucose all the time and to grow.” Cantley, who avoids eating
sugar as much as he can, is currently studying the effects of diet on
mice that have the mutations that are commonly found in colorectal and
other cancers. He says that the effects of a sugary diet on colorectal,
breast and other cancer models “looks very impressive” and “rather
scary.”
Elevated
insulin is also strongly associated with obesity, which is expected
soon to overtake smoking as the leading cause of preventable cancer.
Cancers linked to obesity and diabetes have more receptors for insulin
and IGF-1, and people with defective IGF-1 receptors appear to be nearly
immune to cancer. Retrospective studies, which look back at patient
histories, suggest that many people who develop colorectal, pancreatic
or breast cancer have elevated insulin levels before diagnosis. It’s
perhaps not entirely surprising, then, that when researchers want to
grow breast-cancer cells in the lab, they add insulin to the tissue
culture. When they remove the insulin, the cancer cells die.
“I
think there’s no doubt that insulin is pro-cancer,” Watson says, with
respect to the link between obesity, diabetes and cancer. “It’s as good a
hypothesis as we have now.” Watson takes metformin for cancer
prevention; among its many effects, metformin works to lower insulin
levels. Not every cancer researcher, however, is convinced of the role
of insulin and IGF-1 in cancer. Robert Weinberg, a researcher at
M.I.T.’s Whitehead Institute who pioneered the discovery of
cancer-causing genes in the ’80s, has remained somewhat cool to certain
aspects of the cancer-metabolism revival. Weinberg says that there isn’t
yet enough evidence to know whether the levels of insulin and IGF-1
present in obese people are sufficient to trigger the Warburg effect.
“It’s a hypothesis,” Weinberg says. “I don’t know if it’s right or
wrong.”
During
Warburg’s lifetime, insulin’s effects on metabolic pathways were even
less well understood. But given his ego, it’s highly unlikely that he
would have considered the possibility that anything other than damaged
respiration could cause cancer. He died sure that he was right about the
disease. Warburg framed a quote from Max Planck and hung it above his
desk: “A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its
opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its
opponents eventually die.”
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