BackgroundEpidemiological studies suggest that metformin may reduce the incidence of cancer in patients with diabetes and multiple late phase clinical trials assessing the potential of repurposing this drug are underway. Transcriptomic profiling of tumour samples is an excellent tool to understand drug bioactivity, identify candidate biomarkers and assess for mechanisms of resistance to therapy.MethodsThirty-six patients with untreated primary breast cancer were recruited to a window study and transcriptomic profiling of tumour samples carried out before and after metformin treatment.ResultsMultiple genes that regulate fatty acid oxidation were upregulated at the transcriptomic level and there was a differential change in expression between two previously identified cohorts of patients with distinct metabolic responses. Increase in expression of a mitochondrial fatty oxidation gene composite signature correlated with change in a proliferation gene signature. In vitro assays showed that, in contrast to previous studies in models of normal cells, metformin reduces fatty acid oxidation with a subsequent accumulation of intracellular triglyceride, independent of AMPK activation.ConclusionsWe propose that metformin at clinical doses targets fatty acid oxidation in cancer cells with implications for patient selection and drug combinations.Clinical trial registrationNCT01266486.
Journal article
2020-01-01T00:00:00+00:00
122
258 - 265
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Department of Oncology, University of Oxford, Churchill Hospital, Oxford, OX3 7LE, UK. simon.lord@oncology.ox.ac.uk.
Mitochondria, Animals, Humans, Mice, Breast Neoplasms, Diabetes Mellitus, Metformin, Protein Kinases, Fatty Acids, Gene Expression Profiling, Cell Proliferation, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Oxidation-Reduction, Lipid Peroxidation, Female, Lipid Metabolism, Transcriptome, Heterografts, AMP-Activated Protein Kinase Kinases