| Literature DB >> 31692536 |
Ke Li1, Dengyang Fang1, Zuming Xiong1, Runlan Luo2.
Abstract
Itraconazole (ITZ) is an anti-fungal drug that has been used in clinical practice for nearly 35 years. Recently, numerous experiments have shown that ITZ possesses anti-cancer properties. The Hedgehog (Hh) pathway plays a pivotal role in fundamental processes, including embryogenesis, structure, morphology and proliferation in various species. This pathway is typically silent in adult cells, and inappropriate activity is linked to various tumor types. The most important mechanism of ITZ in the treatment of cancer is inhibition of the Hh pathway through the inhibition of smoothened receptors (SMO), glioma-associated oncogene homologs (GLI), and their downstream targets. In this review, we discuss the mechanisms of ITZ in the treatment of cancer through inhibition of the Hh pathway, which includes anti-inflammation, prevention of tumor growth, induction of cell cycle arrest, induction of apoptosis and autophagy, prevention of angiogenesis, and drug resistance. We also discuss the clinical use of ITZ in many types of cancers. We hope this review will provide more information to support future studies on ITZ in the treatment of various cancers.Entities:
Keywords: Itraconazole; apoptosis; autophagy; cancer; hedgehog pathway
Year: 2019 PMID: 31692536 PMCID: PMC6711563 DOI: 10.2147/OTT.S223119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Onco Targets Ther ISSN: 1178-6930 Impact factor: 4.147
Figure 1The chemical structure of Itraconazole.
Figure 2(A) In an adult cell, Hh pathway is always silent or poorly activated. Patched 1 (PTCH1) could inhibit the smoothened receptor (SMO), and then suppress the phosphorylation of glioma-associated oncogene homolog (GLI), and the dissociation from the suppressor of fused (SUFU), to from GLI repressor (GLIR), which translocates to the nucleus to suppress the expression of target genes, including Bcl-2, AKT, mTOR, VEGF. The link between Hh pathway and human cancers has long been recognized. (B) In a cancer cell, Hh is overexpressed, its ligands, such as SHh ligand, are released to bind with PTCH1 immediately, thereby alleviating the inhibition of SMO by PTCH. The activated SMO is then translocated from vesicles to the primary cilium of the cell membrane, in order to activate GLI, which is activated through mediating the dissociation of GLI proteins from the SUFU. This allows the translocation of GLI proteins to the nucleus where they bind DNA and regulate the transcription of their target genes. In addition, Itraconazole (ITZ) could inhibit the accumulation of SMO, as well as, ITZ could also inhibit GLI directly, these lead to the inhibition of target genes to treat cancer.
Figure 3In cancer cells, the activated SMO and GLI could be suppressed by ITZ, these lead to the inhibition of target genes including Sox9/mTOR, cyclin D1, Wnt/β-catenin, Bcl-2/cyt C, PI3K/AKT/mTOR, vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2 (VEGFR2), multidrug resistance protein 1 (ABCC1) to inhibit the growth and proliferation of many cancers in vivo and in vitro, arrest cell cycle, inhibit angiogenesis, and induce apoptosis and autophagy.
Some cancer types treated by ITZ in vitro through Hh pathway
| Cancer Type | Cell Line | IC50/EC50 of ITZ | Morlecular Target | Biological Effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Colorectal cancer | Cancer cells with molecular diversity | — | SMO and SuFu/WNT inhibition; | Anti-proliferation, perturbing dormancy | |
| Basal cell carcinoma | ASZ001 cells | 1–30 µM | SOX9-mTOR inhibition | Anti-proliferation, inducing apoptosis | |
| Epithelial ovarian cancer | HUVEC | 250 nM | VEGFR2, GLI1, mTOR inhibition | Anti-proliferation, inhibiting angiogenesis | |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | Huh-7 | 10 μM | ABCC1, GLI2 inhibition | Inhibiting metastasis | |
| Gastric cancer | MKN45, AGS cells | 10 μM | GLI1 inhibition | Anti-proliferation, arresting cell cycle at G1-S phase, inducing apoptosis | |
| Melanoma | SK-MEL-28 | 15.71 μM | GLI1, GLI2, Wnt3A/β-catenin and PI3K/mTOR inhibition | Anti-proliferation, inhibiting angiogenesis and metastasis | |
| Breast cancer | 5 μM | SHh, GLI1 inhibition | Anti-proliferation, inducing apoptosis and autophagy | ||
| Multiple myeloma | NCI-H929 | 1.5 μmol/L | GLI1, Cyclin D1, Bcl-2 inhibition | Inhibiting growth, inducing apoptosis | |
| Malignant pleural mesothelial | MPM cells | ≥2.5 μM | SMO inhibition | Inhibiting cell viabiligy, inducing apoptosis | |
| Endometrial cancer | HEC-1A | 10 μM | GLI1 inhibition | Inhibiting growth, inducing apoptosis |
Abbreviations: ITZ, itraconazole; Hh pathway, hedgehog pathway; GLI, glioma-associated oncogene homolog; SHh, sonic hedgehog; SMO, smoothened receptor; VEGFR2, vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2; ABCC1, multidrug resistance protein 1.
Some examples of clinical trials of ITZ on different cancers
| Basal cell carcinoma | 29 (19 treated, 10 controls) | Phase 2 | 200 mg twice daily for 1 month, or 100 mg twice daily for average 2.3 months | Hh pathway inhibition | Cell proliferation inhibited by 45%, and tumor area reduced by 24% | Fatigue (grade 2), and heart failure (grade 4) | |
| Metastatic basal cell carcinoma | 5 | Phase 2 | 400 mg daily on days 6–18, with arsenic trioxide on days 1–5 | Hh pathway inhibition | GLI1 mRNA reduced by 75% | Fatigue (grade 2), and heart failure (grade 4) | |
| Advanced basal cell carcinoma | 1 | Case report | 200 mg daily for 2 weeks with 200 mg daily of sonidegib after failure with vismodegib | Hh pathway inhibition | Tumor regressed | — | |
| Stage III unresectable pancreatic adenocarcinoma | 1 | Case report | 200 mg daily for 9 months | Hh pathway inhibition | Tumor size reduced and resected | — | |
| Metastatic pancreatic cancer | 38 | Retrospective analysis | 400 mg daily on days −2 to +2 in combination with other chemotherapy (docetaxel, gemcitabine and carboplatin) every 2 weeks for 3–11 cycles | Hh pathway inhibition, angiogenesis and | The mean overall survival was 11.4 months | — | |
| Biochemically recurrent prostate cancer | 1 | Case report | 600 mg daily for 5 months | — | PSA fell by >50% | Hypoaldosteronism, hyperbilirubinaemia | |
| Metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer | 46 (17 in low dose group, 29 in high dose group) | Phase 2 | Low dose: 200 mg daily; High dose: 600 mg daily until disease progression or toxicity | Hh pathway inhibition | Disease progression in 15 (low dose) and 22 (high dose) | Fatigue, anorexia, rash, hypertension, and hypokalaemia (all in Grade 3) | |
| Progressive nonsquamous non-small -cell lung cancer | 23 (15 treated with ITZ, 8 controls) | Phase 2 | pemetrexed 500 mg/m2 on day 1, with or without ITZ 200 mg daily, on a 21-day cycle, for 3 months | — | Overall survival longer | — | |
| Recurrent clear cell ovarian carcinoma | 9 | Retrospective analysis | 400 mg daily on days −2 to +2 with chemotherapy (docetaxel and carboplatin) on day 1, repeated every 2 weeks | — | The overall survival was 1047 days, and progression free survival was 544 days | Deranged liver function (Grade 1), and anorexia (Grade 2) | |
| Recurrent triple-negative breast cancer | 13 | Retrospective analysis | 400 mg daily on days −2 to +2 with chemotherapy (docetaxel and carboplatin) on day 1, repeated every 2 weeks | — | The overall survival was longer for 20.4 months, and progression free survival was 10.8 months | Fatigue, insomnia, nausea, and vomiting |
Abbreviations: ITZ, itraconazole; Hh pathway, hedgehog pathway; GLI, glioma-associated oncogene homolog.