| Literature DB >> 33844847 |
Karin Hoppe-Seyler1, Anja L Herrmann1,2, Antonia Däschle1, Bianca J Kuhn2,3, Tobias D Strobel1,2, Claudia Lohrey1, Julia Bulkescher1, Jeroen Krijgsveld3,4, Felix Hoppe-Seyler1.
Abstract
Oncogenic types of human papillomaviruses (HPVs) are major human carcinogens. The viral E6/E7 oncogenes maintain the malignant growth of HPV-positive cancer cells. Targeted E6/E7 inhibition results in efficient induction of cellular senescence, which could be exploited for therapeutic purposes. Here we show that viral E6/E7 expression is strongly downregulated by Metformin in HPV-positive cervical cancer and head and neck cancer cells, both at the transcript and protein level. Metformin-induced E6/E7 repression is glucose and PI3K-dependent but-other than E6/E7 repression under hypoxia-AKT-independent. Proteome analyses reveal that Metformin-induced HPV oncogene repression is linked to the downregulation of cellular factors associated with E6/E7 expression in HPV-positive cancer biopsies. Notably, despite efficient E6/E7 repression, Metformin induces only a reversible proliferative stop in HPV-positive cancer cells and enables them to evade senescence. Metformin also efficiently blocks senescence induction in HPV-positive cancer cells in response to targeted E6/E7 inhibition by RNA interference. Moreover, Metformin treatment enables HPV-positive cancer cells to escape from chemotherapy-induced senescence. These findings uncover profound effects of Metformin on the virus/host cell interactions and the phenotype of HPV-positive cancer cells with implications for therapy-induced senescence, for attempts to repurpose Metformin as an anticancer agent and for the development of E6/E7-inhibitory therapeutic strategies.Entities:
Keywords: Metformin; cervical cancer; chemotherapy; human papillomavirus; tumor virus
Year: 2021 PMID: 33844847 DOI: 10.1002/ijc.33594
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cancer ISSN: 0020-7136 Impact factor: 7.396