| Literature DB >> 30619086 |
Abstract
Metformin is the most widely prescribed drug to treat patients with type II diabetes, for whom retrospective studies suggest that metformin may have anticancer properties. However, in experiments performed with isolated cells, authors have reported both pro- and anti-apoptotic effects of metformin. The exact molecular mechanism of action of metformin remains partly unknown despite its use for over 60 years and more than 17,000 articles in PubMed. Among the various widely recognized or recently proposed targets, it has been reported consistently that metformin is capable of inhibiting mitochondrial respiratory chain Complex I. Since most of the effects of metformin have been replicated by other inhibitors of Complex I, it has been suggested that the mechanism of action of metformin involved the inhibition of Complex I. However, compared to conventional Complex I inhibitors, the metformin-induced inhibition of Complex I has unique characteristics. Among these, the most original one is that the concentrations of metformin required to inhibit Complex I are lower in intact cells than in isolated mitochondria. Experiments with isolated mitochondria or Complex I were generally performed using millimolar concentrations of metformin, while plasma levels remain in the micromolar range in both human and animal studies, highlighting that metformin concentration is an important issue. In order to explain the effects in animals based on observations in cells and mitochondria, some authors proposed a direct effect of the drug on Complex I involving an accumulation of metformin inside the mitochondria while others proposed an indirect effect (the drug no longer having to diffuse into the mitochondria). This brief review attempts to: gather arguments for and against each hypothesis concerning the mechanism by which metformin inhibits Complex I and to highlight remaining questions about the toxicity mechanism of metformin for certain cancer cells.Entities:
Keywords: Complex I; cancer; cell death; metformin; mitochondria; permeability transition; pharmacokinetic
Year: 2018 PMID: 30619086 PMCID: PMC6304344 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2018.00753
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Mechanism of action of metformin on complex I: the direct hypothesis and the indirect hypothesis. Metformin enters cells via Organic Cation Transporters (OCTs) and leaves cells via multidrug and toxin extrusion (MATE) transporters. Assuming a plasma membrane potential of 35 mV and a passive mechanism of OCTs and MATE, the cytosolic metformin concentration is expected to be 4 times that of the plasma concentration. In the direct hypothesis (left), metformin is supposed to enter mitochondria via a hypothetical carrier reaching a matrix concentration 1,000 times that of the cytosol for mitochondrial membrane potential of 180 mV. In the indirect hypothesis (right), metformin does not enter mitochondria but stimulates a hypothetical signaling pathway that eventually modifies Complex I conformation, making it less active.
Main differences in the characteristics of Complex I inhibition according to the model used.
| Speed of inhibition | Time dependent | ( | Immediate (minutes) | ( |
| Type of inhibition | Partial | ( | Total | ( |
| Affinity | Apparent IC50 approximately 1 mM after 30 min in isolated rat hepatocytes Apparent IC50 250 μM and 330 μM after 6 h incubation in 143B and HepG2 cells respectively | ( | Apparent IC50 15 mM in isolated mitochondria IC50 79 mM in sub-mitochondrial particles IC50 66 mM in immunocaptured Complex I IC50 19 mM in isolated Complex I | ( |
| Inhibition in State-3? | Yes | ( | Yes | ( |
| Inhibition in State-4? | Yes | ( | No | ( |
| Inhibition after uncoupling | Yes | ( | No | ( |
| Inhibition after the removal of metformin | Yes | ( | No for metformin concentration ≤ 2 mM | ( |
| NADH/NAD+ | Increases | ( | Decreases | ( |