| Literature DB >> 35118411 |
Hiroshi Kobayashi1,2, Hiroshi Shigetomi1,3, Shogo Imanaka1,2.
Abstract
Ovarian function suppression is the current pharmacotherapy of endometriosis with limited benefit and adverse effects. New therapeutic strategies other than hormonal therapy are developed based on the molecular mechanisms involved in the hypoxic and oxidative stress environments and metabolism unique to endometriosis. A literature search was performed between January 2000 and March 2021 in the PubMed database using a combination of specific terms. Endometriosis-associated metabolic changes have been organized into four hallmarks: (1) glucose uptake, (2) aerobic glycolysis, (3) lactate production and accumulation, and (4) metabolic conversion from mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) to aerobic glycolysis. Endometriotic cells favor glycolytic metabolism over mitochondrial OXPHOS to produce essential energy for cell survival. Hypoxia, a common feature of the endometriosis environment, is a key player in this metabolic conversion, which may lead to glucose transporter overexpression, pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 1 (PDK1) and lactate dehydrogenase kinase A (LDHA) activation, and pyruvate dehydrogenase complex inactivation. Evading mitochondrial OXPHOS mitigates excessive generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) that may trigger cell death. Therefore, the coinactivation of LDHA and PDK1 can induce the accumulation of mitochondrial ROS by converting energy metabolism to mitochondrial OXPHOS, causing endometriotic cell death. Metabolic pattern reconstruction in endometriotic lesions is a critical factor in cell survival and disease progression. One therapeutic strategy that may avoid hormone manipulation is focused on mitigating metabolic changes that have been detected in cells/tissues from women with endometriosis. LAYEntities:
Keywords: Warburg effect; endometriosis; glycolysis; hypoxia; metabolism; oxidative phosphorylation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35118411 PMCID: PMC8788578 DOI: 10.1530/RAF-21-0053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Fertil ISSN: 2633-8386
Figure 1The number of articles identified by searching for keyword combinations. This figure shows the number of articles identified by keyword combinations and the number of records identified through database searching, records after duplicate removal, records screened, removal of inappropriate articles by reading full-text articles, and full-text articles assessed for eligibility. Keywords: 1, endometriosis; 2, hypoxia; 3, oxidative stress; 4, metabolism; 5, glycolysis; 6, oxidative phosphorylation; and 7, Warburg.
Figure 2Glycolysis and mitochondrial metabolism in endometriosis. Colored boxes indicate major metabolic pathways: aerobic glycolysis (yellow box) and the TCA cycle/OXPHOS (green box). Red letters indicate increased genes, gene transcripts, enzymes, and metabolites; blue letters indicate reduced expression.
Summary of drugs or therapeutics tested in endometriosis and other models. This table includes target protein/metabolite, mechanism of action, in vitro/in vivo/animal experiments, results, and references.
| Target protein/metabolite | The mechanism of action | Results | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Suppression of glucose uptake | ||||
| Genistein | A natural isoflavone | Genistein suppressed aerobic glycolysis and induced hepatocellular carcinoma cell death | Li | |
| Genistein, phlorizin, ritonavir, indinavir, STF-31, and WZB117 | A natural isoflavone; glucose transporter (GLUT and SGLT) inhibitors; HIV protease inhibitor | The HIV protease inhibitor ritonavir suppressed glucose uptake to improve ulcerative colitis | Jodeleit | |
| SLC2A* | Glucose transporter | Human tissue samples | Glucose transporter SLC2A expression in ectopic endometriotic lesions is significantly higher than in eutopic endometrial tissue | McKinnon |
| GZFLC* | A classic Chinese medicinal formula | Rat endometriosis model | GZFLC suppressed the expression levels of TGF-β1, GLUT4, and VEGF and inhibited the development of endometriosis | Zhou |
| Atorvastatin and resveratrol* | Statin: inhibitors of hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA reductase | Female Wistar rats/the experimental endometriosis | Effects of atorvastatin and resveratrol against the experimental endometriosis; evidence for glucose and monocarboxylate transporters | Bahrami |
| (2) Suppression of aerobic glycolysis | ||||
| Genetic ablation HK2 | A family of ubiquitous exose-phosphorylating enzymes that prime glucose for intracellular utilization | Mouse models; hepatocellular carcinoma/colorectal cancer/glioblastoma, etc. | Genetic ablation of HK2 inhibited tumor growth | Ciscato |
| (E)-1-(pyridin-4-yl)-3-(quinolin-2-yl)prop-2-en-1-one (PFK15) | Enzymes related to glycolysis; inhibitors of PFKFB3; glycolysis blockage by targeting PFKFB3 | Targeting aerobic glycolysis with PFKFB3 inhibitors suppressed tumor growth and metastasis, providing a promising strategy for cancer treatment | Li | |
| Benserazide: inhibitors of PKM2 | PKM2 is an enzyme that generates pyruvate and ATP in the glycolytic pathway | Benserazide blocked PKM2 enzyme activity, leading to inhibition of aerobic glycolysis; benserazide inhibited tumor cell proliferation, colony formation, invasion, and migration | Zhou | |
| Inhibitor of HSF1: KRIBB11* | A transcription factor that is rapidly induced after temperature stress and binds heat shock promoter elements | HSF1 promoted endometriosis development and glycolysis by upregulating PFKFB3 expression; the HSF1 inhibitor KRIBB11 abrogated endometriosis progression | Wang | |
| (3) Metabolic switch from aerobic glycolysis to OXPHOS | ||||
| DCA | DCA is an anticancer agent that can reverse the glycolytic phenotype in cancer cells; a pyruvate analog; a prototypical PDK inhibitor | Several cancers | DCA inhibits mitochondrial PDK, shifted metabolism from glycolysis to glucose oxidation, decreased mitochondrial membrane potential, and increased mitochondrial H2O2; DCA decreased proliferation, induced apoptosis, and inhibited tumor growth; the orally available DCA is a promising selective anticancer agent | Bonnet |
| DCA | DCA has antiproliferative properties in addition to promoting apoptosis | Sun | ||
| DCA | DCA may be effective in multiple myeloma patients with an activated aerobic glycolytic pathway | Sanchez | ||
| DCA | Several cancer models; clinical administration in cancer therapy | Coadministration of DCA with conventional chemotherapy, radiotherapy, other drugs, or natural compounds may be promising for effective cancer therapy | Tataranni & Piccoli (2019) | |
| Three glycolysis inhibitors: DCA, 2-deoxyglucose, or 3-promopyruvate | The chemotherapeutic agent and glycolysis inhibitors induced oxidative stress-associated damage in HepG2 cells. | Korga | ||
| DCA | A phase 1 study in patients with advanced solid tumors | The phase 1 study was undertaken to assess the safety, recommended dose, and pharmacokinetic profile of oral DCA in patients with advanced solid tumors. | Chu | |
| DCA | An openlabel phase II trial | The clinical trial determined the response rate, safety, and tolerability of oral DCA in patients with metastatic breast cancer and advanced-stage nonsmall cell lung cancer. | Garon | |
| DCA | A pilot phase 2 study in patients with multiple myeloma | The pharmacokinetic profile for DCA varied from patient to patient, and the overall response rate for multiple myeloma was low | Tian | |
| DCA* | The PDK1 expression was upregulated in ectopic stromal cells through hypoxia-induced signals; inhibition of PDK1 activity by treatment with DCA-induced ectopic stromal cell death | Lee | ||
| DCA* | Human peritoneal mesothelial cells (HPMC) in women with endometriosis exhibited metabolic conversion from OXPHOS to aerobic glycolysis due to reduced enzymatic activity of PDH compared to HPMC in disease-free women; TGF-β1 is believed to be responsible for this abnormal phenotype; treatment of endometriosis HPMC with DCA normalizes metabolism and suppresses the proliferation of ESC; oral DCA reduced endometriosis lesion size in a mouse model | Horne | ||
| DCA | Sepsis model: | DCA treatment was associated with improved lifespan of sepsis survivors | Bakalov | |
| IQ | A sesquiterpene quinone isolated from the marine sponge | Human and murine cancer cells, such as A549, DLD-1, RKO, and LLC cells | A novel candidate for anticancer therapeutics that act via the inhibition of PDK1 activity | Kwak |
| | A herbal medicinal product used to treat gynecological symptoms, including amenorrhea; | Kim | ||
| FX11 | Specific LDHA inhibitor: a small-molecule inhibitor | FX11-induced significant oxidative stress and cancer cell death | Le | |
| N-hydroxy-2-carboxy-substituted indole compounds | Specific LDHA inhibitor: a small-molecule inhibitor | Functional analysis of synthesized LDHA inhibitors | Granchi | |
| Inhibition of LDHA by either RNA interference or pharmacological agents | Inhibition of LDHA by either RNA interference or pharmacological agents | Review of inhibition of LDHA by either RNA interference or pharmacological agents block tumor progress | Oermann | |
| Inhibition of LDHA by either RNA interference or pharmacological agents | Inhibition of LDHA by either RNA interference or pharmacological agents | Review of inhibition of LDHA can block tumor growth, maintenance, and progression | Miao | |
| shRNA-mediated knockdown of LDHA | Inhibition of LDHA by either RNA interference or pharmacological agents | shRNA-mediated knockdown of LDHA resulted in elevated mitochondrial ROS production and a concomitant decrease in cell proliferation and motility in breast cancer MDA-MB-435 cells | Arseneault | |
| Inhibition of LDHA by either RNA interference* | Inhibition of LDHA by either RNA interference | Immunohistochemistry of human endometriosis samples; | Hypoxia treatment induced the expression of LDHA; silencing of LDHA expression displayed an impairment of mitochondrial function and promoted apoptosis while inhibiting migration and glycolysis | Zheng |
| None | Schizophrenia | Experiments with schizophrenia brain | A significant increase in lactate in schizophrenia brain | Pruett and Meador-Woodruff (2020) |
| None | Autoimmune disease | Animal studies | Pro-inflammatory signals in autoimmune disease induced metabolic reprogramming, characterized by a shift to aerobic glycolysis | Kornberg (2020) |
*Results of preclinical studies on endometriosis.
DCA, dichloroacetate; ESC, endometrial stromal cells; FX11, 3-dihydroxy-6-methyl-7-(phenylmethyl)-4-propylnaphthalene-1-carboxylic acid; GZFLC, Gui-Zhi-Fu-Ling capsules; HK2, hexokinase 2; HSF1, heat shock factor 1; IQ, ilimaquinone; PBMCs, peripheral blood mononuclear cells; PFKFB3, phosphofructokinase-2/fructose-2,6-bisphosphatase 3; PKM2, pyruvate kinase isozyme; SLC2A, solute carrier family 2.