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Why are cancers acidic? A carrier-mediated diffusion model for H+ transport in the interstitial fluid.

Abstract:
31P MRS studies have shown that the intracellular compartment ot tumours is kept near neutrality, whereas the interstitial fluid is acidic (pH 6.5-6.8). Why is this compartment acidic? Balance studies confirm that tumours produce excessive lactic acid, although less than usually supposed, but this cannot be the whole story, since Tannock and co-workers have shown interstitial acidity in glycolysis-deficient tumours. Another major acid load is caused by hydration of CO2 molecules to carbonic acid, catalysed by carbonic anhydrase. The distance that H+ must diffuse from cancer cells to capillaries is further than in normal tissue and this will increase acidification near the cells. We show that previous quantitative models based on simple H+ diffusion are unsatisfactory. This is because most H+ ions cross the interstitial space bound to buffers such as inorganic phosphate. Although these protonated buffers (i.e. conjugate acids) diffuse much more slowly than H+ ions they carry most of the protons, so the pH predicted by this model is closer to neutrality for a given proton production rate than that predicted by the dissolved H+ model. We have developed a mathematical model of this carrier-mediated system that predicts pHe values as low as those observed in some tumours.
Authors:
JR Griffiths, DJ McIntyre, FA Howe, M Stubbs
Journal:
Novartis Found Symp
Citation info:
240:46-62
Publication date:
1st Aug 2001
Full text
DOI