4.7 Review

Biological Functions and Molecular Mechanisms of Antibiotic Tigecycline in the Treatment of Cancers

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms20143577

Keywords

antibiotics; tigecycline; cell cycle arrest; autophagy; mitochondrial translation; OxPhos

Funding

  1. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [XDJK2019C013]
  2. Chongqing Special Postdoctoral Science Foundation [XmT2018080]
  3. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2016YFC1302204, 2017YFC1308600]
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81672502]
  5. Research and Innovation Project of Graduate Students in Chongqing [CYS19136]

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As an FDA-approved drug, glycylcycline tigecycline has been used to treat complicated microbial infections. However, recent studies in multiple hematologic and malignant solid tumors reveal that tigecycline treatment induces cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, autophagy and oxidative stress. In addition, tigecycline also inhibits mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation, cell proliferation, migration, invasion and angiogenesis. Importantly, combinations of tigecycline with chemotherapeutic or targeted drugs such as venetoclax, doxorubicin, vincristine, paclitaxel, cisplatin, and imatinib, have shown to be promising strategies for cancer treatment. Mechanism of action studies reveal that tigecycline leads to the inhibition of mitochondrial translation possibly through interacting with mitochondrial ribosome. Meanwhile, this drug also interferes with several other cell pathways/targets including MYC, HIFs, PI3K/AKT or AMPK-mediated mTOR, cytoplasmic p21 (CIP1/Waf1) and Wnt/beta-catenin signaling. These evidences indicate that antibiotic tigecycline is a promising drug for cancer treatment alone or in combination with other anticancer drugs. This review summarizes the biological function of tigecycline in the treatment of tumors and comprehensively discusses its mode of action.

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