4.7 Article

Biguanides Exert Antitumoral Actions in Pituitary Tumor Cells Through AMPK-Dependent and -Independent Mechanisms

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Volume 104, Issue 8, Pages 3501-3513

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/jc.2019-00056

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Junta de Andalucia [CTS-1406, BIO-0139]
  2. Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades [BFU2016-80360-R, FJCI-2016-30825]
  3. European Union (ERDF/ESF, Investing in Your Future) [PI16/00264, CP15/00156]
  4. Instituto de Salud Carlos III

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Context: Pituitary neuroendocrine tumors (PitNETs) are a commonly underestimated pathology in terms of incidence and associated morbimortality. Currently, an appreciable subset of patients are resistant or poorly responsive to the main current medical treatments [i.e., synthetic somatostatin analogs (SSAs) and dopamine agonists]. Thus, development and optimization of novel and available medical therapies is necessary. Biguanides (metformin, buformin, and phenformin) are antidiabetic drugs that exert antitumoral actions in several tumor types, but their pharmacological effects on PitNETs are poorly known. Objective: We aimed to explore the direct effects of biguanides on key functions (cell viability, hormone release, apoptosis, and signaling pathways) in primary cell cultures from human PitNETs and cell lines. Additionally, we evaluated the effect of combined metformin with SSAs on cell viability and hormone secretion. Design: A total of 13 corticotropinomas, 13 somatotropinomas, 13 nonfunctioning PitNETs, 3 prolactinomas, and 2 tumoral pituitary cell lines (AtT-20 and GH3) were used to evaluate the direct effects of biguanides on cell viability, hormone release, apoptosis, and signaling pathways. Results: Biguanides reduced cell viability in all PitNETs and cell lines (with phenformin being the most effective biguanide) and increased apoptosis in somatotropinomas. Moreover, buformin and phenformin, but not metformin, reduced hormone secretion in a cell type-specific manner. Combination metformin/SSA therapy did not increase SSA monotherapy effectiveness. Effects of biguanides on PitNETs could involve the modulation of AMP-activated protein kinase-dependent ([Ca2+](i), PI3K/Akt) and independent (MAPK) mechanisms. Conclusion: Altogether, our data unveil clear antitumoral effects of biguanides on PitNET cells, opening avenues to explore their potential as drugs to treat these pathologies.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available