| Rank |
Pathway / Axis |
Cancer Cells |
Normal Cells |
TSF |
Primary Effect |
Notes / Interpretation |
| 1 |
Glycolysis inhibition via thiol-alkylation of glycolytic enzymes |
↓ glycolytic flux; ↓ ATP (often rapid) |
↔ to ↓ (model-dependent) |
P/R |
Energetic collapse |
Often framed around HK2, but 3BP is broadly thiol-reactive; glycolysis collapse is a convergent phenotype rather than a single-enzyme story. |
| 2 |
Mitochondrial bioenergetics disruption |
↓ OXPHOS; ↓ ΔΨm; ↑ MPTP (context-dependent) |
↔ to ↓ (dose-dependent) |
P/R |
ATP depletion + mitochondrial stress |
Dual hit (glycolysis + mitochondria) is a major reason for potency in high-glycolytic tumors; also a toxicity driver if exposure is systemic. |
| 3 |
MCT1-dependent uptake |
↑ uptake and sensitivity when MCT1-high |
↔ (varies by tissue MCT1) |
P |
Determinant of selectivity |
MCT1 has been shown as a key sensitivity node in multiple models; “selectivity” claims are strongest when transporter context is documented. |
| 4 |
Redox buffering and thiol pool depletion |
↓ GSH/thiols; redox crisis |
↔ to ↓ (dose-dependent) |
R/G |
Lowered antioxidant capacity |
Because 3BP alkylates thiols, GSH depletion can be both direct and indirect; can amplify downstream death pathways and resistance phenotypes. |
| 5 |
ROS axis |
↑ ROS (often); oxidative damage (context-dependent) |
↔ (dose- and context-dependent) |
R |
Oxidative stress amplification |
ROS changes are frequently secondary to mitochondrial disruption + thiol depletion; can be decisive for apoptosis/ferroptosis engagement. |
| 6 |
AMPK energy-stress signaling |
↑ AMPK; ↓ anabolic signaling (context-dependent) |
↑ AMPK (protective or adaptive) |
R |
Stress adaptation vs death priming |
Energetic collapse typically triggers AMPK; downstream outcomes depend on baseline metabolic state and co-treatments. |
| 7 |
Cell-death programs: apoptosis and autophagy |
↑ apoptosis; ↑ autophagy (context-dependent) |
↔ to ↑ stress responses |
G |
Execution of cytotoxicity |
Multiple reports show mixed death phenotypes; autophagy can be cytoprotective or contribute to death depending on context and timing. |
| 8 |
Ferroptosis axis |
↑ ferroptosis susceptibility (context-dependent) |
↔ (context-dependent) |
G |
Lipid-peroxidation-driven death |
Most consistent when redox buffering is weakened and/or combined with agents that tilt iron/lipid-ROS balance. |
| 9 |
NRF2 axis |
↔ (model-dependent; often stress-activated) |
↔ (model-dependent) |
G |
Adaptive antioxidant response |
NRF2 behavior varies: oxidative stress can activate NRF2, but thiol-alkylation/redox collapse can also overwhelm defenses; treat as context-dependent. |
| 10 |
Chemosensitization / radiosensitization |
↑ sensitization (context-dependent) |
↔ |
R/G |
Combination leverage |
Reported synergy with targeted therapy/chemo/radiation in some models, typically via metabolic stress + redox imbalance. |
| 11 |
Clinical Translation Constraint |
Formulation/delivery-limited; systemic toxicity risk |
Off-target injury risk |
— |
Therapeutic index limitation |
Unformulated 3BP has significant toxicity concerns; translation efforts emphasize formulation (e.g., cyclodextrin/microencapsulation) and/or locoregional strategies and derivatives now entering early clinical trials. |