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Pierre Sonveaux, Frédérique Végran, Thies Schroeder, Melanie C. Wergin, Julien Verrax, Zahid N. Rabbani, Christophe J. De Saedeleer, Kelly M. Kennedy, Caroline Diepart, Bénédicte F. Jordan, Michael J. Kelley, Bernard Gallez, Miriam L. Wahl, Olivier Feron, Mark W. Dewhirst
Published in Volume 118, Issue 12
J Clin Invest. 2008; 118(12):3930–3942 doi:10.1172/JCI36843
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Figure 2
Lactate is a substrate for oxidative tumor cell metabolism.

(A and B) Enzymatic assays were used to determine glucose utilization (solid lines) and lactate concentration in the supernatant of confluent cells (dotted lines). Note the different scales of the left and right y axes in A. At time 0, cells received fresh medium containing glucose, FBS, and sodium lactate (A) or medium containing sodium lactate but no glucose and FBS (B). n = 4–5. (C and D) ρ0 SiHa and WiDr cells were produced by a chronic treatment with low-dose ethidium bromide. Then, cells were cultured in fresh medium containing glucose, FBS, and sodium lactate from time 0. Glucose utilization (solid lines, left y axes) and lactate concentration in the supernatant of confluent cells (dotted lines, right y axes) were assayed enzymatically to compare the metabolic activity of wild-type versus ρ0 SiHa cells (C) and wild-type versus ρ0 WiDr cells (D). Note the different scales of the left and right y axes. n = 3–5. (E and F) EPR measurements of tumor cells oxygen consumption by SiHa cells (E) and WiDr cells (F) in the indicated experimental culture media. Statistical analyses are presented in Table 1. Error bars represent the SEM and are sometimes smaller than symbols.