Center for Vascular Biology, Department of Cell Biology, University of Connecticut Health Center, 263 Farmington Ave., Farmington, CT 06030-3501, USA.
Breast Cancer Res Treat. 2010 Sep;123(2):333-44. doi: 10.1007/s10549-009-0647-z. Epub 2009 Nov 22.
Dietary energy restriction has been shown to repress both mammary tumorigenesis and aggressive mammary tumor growth in animal studies. Metformin, a caloric restriction mimetic, has a long history of safe use as an insulin sensitizer in diabetics and has been shown to reduce cancer incidence and cancer-related mortality in humans. To determine the potential impact of dietary energy availability and metformin therapy on aggressive breast tumor growth and metastasis, an orthotopic syngeneic model using triple negative 66cl4 tumor cells in Balb/c mice was employed. The effect of dietary restriction, a standard maintenance diet or a diet with high levels of free sugar, were tested for their effects on tumor growth and secondary metastases to the lung. Metformin therapy with the various diets indicated that metformin can be highly effective at suppressing systemic metabolic biomarkers such as IGF-1, insulin and glucose, especially in the high energy diet treated animals. Long-term metformin treatment demonstrated moderate yet significant effects on primary tumor growth, most significantly in conjunction with the high energy diet. When compared to the control diet, the high energy diet promoted tumor growth, expression of the inflammatory adipokines leptin and resistin, induced lung priming by bone marrow-derived myeloid cells and promoted metastatic potential. Metformin had no effect on adipokine expression or the development of lung metastases with the standard or the high energy diet. These data indicate that metformin may have tumor suppressing activity where a metabolic phenotype of high fuel intake, metabolic syndrome, and diabetes exist, but may have little or no effect on events controlling the metastatic niche driven by proinflammatory events.
饮食能量限制已被证明可抑制动物研究中的乳腺癌发生和侵袭性乳腺肿瘤生长。二甲双胍是一种热量限制模拟物,作为糖尿病患者的胰岛素增敏剂已有很长的安全使用历史,并且已被证明可降低人类的癌症发病率和癌症相关死亡率。为了确定饮食能量供应和二甲双胍治疗对侵袭性乳腺肿瘤生长和转移的潜在影响,在 Balb/c 小鼠中使用三阴性 66cl4 肿瘤细胞建立了同源性原位模型。测试了饮食限制(标准维持饮食或高糖饮食)对肿瘤生长和肺继发性转移的影响。用各种饮食进行二甲双胍治疗表明,二甲双胍可高度有效地抑制全身代谢生物标志物,如 IGF-1、胰岛素和葡萄糖,尤其是在高能量饮食处理的动物中。长期的二甲双胍治疗对原发性肿瘤生长具有适度但显著的影响,与高能量饮食联合使用时效果最为显著。与对照饮食相比,高能量饮食促进了肿瘤生长、炎性脂肪因子瘦素和抵抗素的表达,通过骨髓来源的髓样细胞诱导了肺部启动,并促进了转移潜能。二甲双胍对标准或高能量饮食中的脂肪因子表达或肺转移的发展没有影响。这些数据表明,二甲双胍可能具有肿瘤抑制活性,在存在高燃料摄入、代谢综合征和糖尿病的代谢表型的情况下,但可能对由促炎事件驱动的转移性龛位的控制事件几乎没有或没有影响。