Guo Hui, Zhong Yan, Jackson Amanda L, Clark Leslie H, Kilgore Josh, Zhang Lu, Han Jianjun, Sheng Xiugui, Gilliam Timothy P, Gehrig Paola A, Zhou Chunxiao, Bae-Jump Victoria L
Department of Gynecologic Oncology, Shandong Cancer Hospital and Institute, Jinan University, Jinan, P.R. China.
Division of Gynecologic Oncology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Oncotarget. 2016 Apr 12;7(15):20338-56. doi: 10.18632/oncotarget.7934.
Everolimus inhibits mTOR kinase activity and its downstream targets by acting on mTORC1 and has anti-tumorigenic activity in ovarian cancer. Clinical and epidemiologic data find that obesity is associated with worse outcomes in ovarian cancer. In addition, obesity leads to hyperactivation of the mTOR pathway in epithelial tissues, suggesting that mTOR inhibitors may be a logical choice for treatment in obesity-driven cancers. However, it remains unclear if obesity impacts the effect of everolimus on tumor growth in ovarian cancer. The present study was aimed at evaluating the effects of everolimus on cytotoxicity, cell metabolism, apoptosis, cell cycle, cell stress and invasion in human ovarian cancer cells. A genetically engineered mouse model of serous ovarian cancer fed a high fat diet or low fat diet allowed further investigation into the inter-relationship between everolimus and obesity in vivo. Everolimus significantly inhibited cellular proliferation, induced cell cycle G1 arrest and apoptosis, reduced invasion and caused cellular stress via inhibition of mTOR pathways in vitro. Hypoglycemic conditions enhanced the sensitivity of cells to everolimus through the disruption of glycolysis. Moreover, everolimus was found to inhibit ovarian tumor growth in both obese and lean mice. This reduction coincided with a decrease in expression of Ki-67 and phosphorylated-S6, as well as an increase in cleaved caspase 3 and phosphorylated-AKT. Metabolite profiling revealed that everolimus was able to alter tumor metabolism through different metabolic pathways in the obese and lean mice. Our findings support that everolimus may be a promising therapeutic agent for obesity-driven ovarian cancers.
依维莫司通过作用于mTORC1抑制mTOR激酶活性及其下游靶点,并在卵巢癌中具有抗肿瘤活性。临床和流行病学数据表明,肥胖与卵巢癌预后较差有关。此外,肥胖导致上皮组织中mTOR通路的过度激活,提示mTOR抑制剂可能是肥胖驱动型癌症治疗的合理选择。然而,肥胖是否影响依维莫司对卵巢癌肿瘤生长的作用仍不清楚。本研究旨在评估依维莫司对人卵巢癌细胞的细胞毒性、细胞代谢、凋亡、细胞周期、细胞应激和侵袭的影响。通过给基因工程改造的浆液性卵巢癌小鼠模型喂食高脂饮食或低脂饮食,进一步研究了依维莫司与肥胖在体内的相互关系。依维莫司在体外通过抑制mTOR通路显著抑制细胞增殖,诱导细胞周期G1期阻滞和凋亡,减少侵袭并引起细胞应激。低血糖条件通过破坏糖酵解增强细胞对依维莫司的敏感性。此外,发现依维莫司在肥胖和瘦小鼠中均能抑制卵巢肿瘤生长。这种减少与Ki-67和磷酸化-S6表达的降低以及裂解的caspase 3和磷酸化-AKT的增加相一致。代谢物谱分析表明,依维莫司能够通过肥胖和瘦小鼠不同的代谢途径改变肿瘤代谢。我们的研究结果支持依维莫司可能是肥胖驱动型卵巢癌的一种有前景的治疗药物。