Wu Xingyu, Adame-Garcia Sendi Rafael, Koshizuka Keiichi, Vo Pham Thuy Tien, Hoang Thomas S, Sato Kuniaki, Izumi Hiroki, Goto Yusuke, Allevato Michael M, Wood Kris C, Lippman Scott M, Gutkind Jorge Silvio
Moores Cancer Center, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California.
Department of Pharmacology, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California.
Cancer Prev Res (Phila). 2024 Dec 3;17(12):571-583. doi: 10.1158/1940-6207.CAPR-24-0124.
Metformin administration has recently emerged as a candidate strategy for the prevention of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). However, the intricate relationship between genetic alterations in HNSCC and metformin sensitivity is still poorly understood, which prevents the stratification of patients, harboring oral premalignant lesions that may benefit from the chemopreventive activity of metformin. In this study, we investigate the impact of prevalent mutations in HNSCC on response to metformin. Notably, we found that the expression of oncogenic HRAS mutants confers resistance to metformin in isogenic HNSCC cell systems, and that HNSCC cells harboring endogenous HRAS mutations display limited sensitivity to metformin. Remarkably, we found that metformin fails to reduce activation of the mTOR pathway in HRAS oncogene-expressing HNSCC cells in vitro and in vivo, correlating with reduced tumor suppressive activity. Mechanistically, we found that this process depends on the ability of HRAS to enhance glycolytic metabolism, thereby suppressing the requirement for oxidative phosphorylation to maintain the cellular energetic balance. Overall, our study revealed that HNSCC cells with oncogenic HRAS mutations exhibit diminished metformin sensitivity, thus shedding light on a potential mechanism of treatment resistance. This finding may also help explain the limited clinical responses to metformin in cancers with RAS mutations. Ultimately, our study underscores the importance of understanding the impact of the genetic landscape in tailoring precision cancer-preventive approaches in the context of HNSCC and other cancers that are characterized by the presence of a defined premalignant state, and therefore, are amenable to cancer interception strategies. Prevention Relevance: Our findings highlight the challenges of using metformin for cancer prevention in RAS-mutant cancers, where elevated glycolysis may reduce drug efficacy. This underscores the need to explore metformin's potential in early, premalignant stages, before metabolic shifts render it less effective.
二甲双胍给药最近已成为预防头颈部鳞状细胞癌(HNSCC)的一种候选策略。然而,HNSCC基因改变与二甲双胍敏感性之间的复杂关系仍知之甚少,这阻碍了对可能受益于二甲双胍化学预防活性的口腔癌前病变患者进行分层。在本研究中,我们调查了HNSCC中常见突变对二甲双胍反应的影响。值得注意的是,我们发现致癌性HRAS突变体的表达在同基因HNSCC细胞系统中赋予对二甲双胍的抗性,并且携带内源性HRAS突变的HNSCC细胞对二甲双胍表现出有限的敏感性。值得注意的是,我们发现二甲双胍在体外和体内均未能降低表达HRAS癌基因的HNSCC细胞中mTOR途径的激活,这与肿瘤抑制活性降低相关。从机制上讲,我们发现这个过程取决于HRAS增强糖酵解代谢的能力,从而抑制维持细胞能量平衡对氧化磷酸化的需求。总体而言,我们的研究表明,具有致癌性HRAS突变的HNSCC细胞对二甲双胍的敏感性降低,从而揭示了一种潜在的耐药机制。这一发现也可能有助于解释RAS突变癌症对二甲双胍的临床反应有限的原因。最终,我们的研究强调了在HNSCC和其他以明确的癌前状态为特征、因此适合癌症拦截策略的癌症背景下,了解基因图谱对定制精准癌症预防方法的影响的重要性。预防相关性:我们的研究结果突出了在RAS突变癌症中使用二甲双胍进行癌症预防的挑战,其中糖酵解升高可能会降低药物疗效。这强调了在代谢转变使其效果降低之前,探索二甲双胍在早期癌前阶段潜力的必要性。