Buzzai Monica, Jones Russell G, Amaravadi Ravi K, Lum Julian J, DeBerardinis Ralph J, Zhao Fangping, Viollet Benoit, Thompson Craig B
Abramson Family Cancer Research Institute, Department of Cancer Biology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Cancer Res. 2007 Jul 15;67(14):6745-52. doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-06-4447.
The effect of the antidiabetic drug metformin on tumor growth was investigated using the paired isogenic colon cancer cell lines HCT116 p53(+/+) and HCT116 p53(-/-). Treatment with metformin selectively suppressed the tumor growth of HCT116 p53(-/-) xenografts. Following treatment with metformin, we detected increased apoptosis in p53(-/-) tumor sections and an enhanced susceptibility of p53(-/-) cells to undergo apoptosis in vitro when subject to nutrient deprivation. Metformin is proposed to function in diabetes treatment as an indirect activator of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK). Treatment with AICAR, another AMPK activator, also showed a selective ability to inhibit p53(-/-) tumor growth in vivo. In the presence of either of the two drugs, HCT116 p53(+/+) cells, but not HCT116 p53(-/-) cells, activated autophagy. A similar p53-dependent induction of autophagy was observed when nontransformed mouse embryo fibroblasts were treated. Treatment with either metformin or AICAR also led to enhanced fatty acid beta-oxidation in p53(+/+) MEFs, but not in p53(-/-) MEFs. However, the magnitude of induction was significantly lower in metformin-treated cells, as metformin treatment also suppressed mitochondrial electron transport. Metformin-treated cells compensated for this suppression of oxidative phosphorylation by increasing their rate of glycolysis in a p53-dependent manner. Together, these data suggest that metformin treatment forces a metabolic conversion that p53(-/-) cells are unable to execute. Thus, metformin is selectively toxic to p53-deficient cells and provides a potential mechanism for the reduced incidence of tumors observed in patients being treated with metformin.
利用配对的同基因结肠癌细胞系HCT116 p53(+/+)和HCT116 p53(-/-)研究了抗糖尿病药物二甲双胍对肿瘤生长的影响。二甲双胍治疗选择性地抑制了HCT116 p53(-/-)异种移植瘤的生长。二甲双胍治疗后,我们在p53(-/-)肿瘤切片中检测到凋亡增加,并且在体外营养剥夺时p53(-/-)细胞发生凋亡的易感性增强。二甲双胍在糖尿病治疗中被认为是AMP激活蛋白激酶(AMPK)的间接激活剂。用另一种AMPK激活剂AICAR治疗也显示出在体内选择性抑制p53(-/-)肿瘤生长的能力。在两种药物中的任何一种存在的情况下,HCT116 p53(+/+)细胞而非HCT116 p53(-/-)细胞激活了自噬。当处理未转化的小鼠胚胎成纤维细胞时,观察到了类似的p53依赖性自噬诱导。用二甲双胍或AICAR处理也导致p53(+/+)小鼠胚胎成纤维细胞中脂肪酸β氧化增强,但在p53(-/-)小鼠胚胎成纤维细胞中未增强。然而,二甲双胍处理的细胞中诱导程度明显较低,因为二甲双胍处理也抑制了线粒体电子传递。二甲双胍处理的细胞通过以p53依赖性方式增加糖酵解速率来补偿这种氧化磷酸化的抑制。总之,这些数据表明二甲双胍治疗促使了一种p53(-/-)细胞无法执行的代谢转换。因此,二甲双胍对p53缺陷细胞具有选择性毒性,并为在用二甲双胍治疗的患者中观察到的肿瘤发生率降低提供了一种潜在机制。
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