| Literature DB >> 35401820 |
Sheng Chen1,2, Donghao Gan2, Sixiong Lin2,3, Yiming Zhong2, Mingjue Chen2, Xuenong Zou3, Zengwu Shao1, Guozhi Xiao2.
Abstract
Aging is a natural process, which plays a critical role in the pathogenesis of a variety of diseases, i.e., aging-related diseases, such as diabetes, osteoarthritis, Alzheimer disease, cardiovascular diseases, cancers, obesity and other metabolic abnormalities. Metformin, the most widely used antidiabetic drug, has been reported to delay aging and display protective effect on attenuating progression of various aging-related diseases by impacting key hallmark events of aging, including dysregulated nutrient sensing, loss of proteostasis, mitochondrial dysfunction, altered intercellular communication, telomere attrition, genomic instability, epigenetic alterations, stem cell exhaustion and cellular senescence. In this review, we provide updated information and knowledge on applications of metformin in prevention and treatment of aging and aging-related diseases. We focus our discussions on the roles and underlying mechanisms of metformin in modulating aging and treating aging-related diseases. © The author(s).Entities:
Keywords: Metformin; aging; aging-related diseases; clinical application; molecular mechanism.
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35401820 PMCID: PMC8965502 DOI: 10.7150/thno.71360
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theranostics ISSN: 1838-7640 Impact factor: 11.600
Figure 1Metformin chemistry, pharmacokinetics and side effects. Metformin contains a double salt group and is synthesized from dimethylamine chloride and dicyandiamide. The oral dose of metformin is 500-1000mg, and the absolute bioavailability of oral metformin hydrochloride is relatively low (about 50-60%), and its absorption process is mainly in the proximal intestine, including the duodenum and jejunum. The Tmax is about 2.5 hours. Its typical peak plasma concentration (Cmax) is about 2 μg/ml, and rarely exceeds 4 μg/ml. And the state concentration range is 0.3-1.5 μg/ml. The absorption of metformin in the gastrointestinal tract (GIT) is slow and incomplete. Metformin is not metabolized by the liver. Plasma protein binding is negligible and widely distributed (usual volume of distribution [Vd], 100-300l). Metformin has an elimination half-life (T1/2) of ~6-7h. The main way of elimination is rapid excretion through the kidneys, where 30-50% of the metformin is eliminated and remains unchanged in the urine. The most common side effects include gastrointestinal irritation, lactic acidosis and vitamin B12 deficiency. Adapted from Bailey et al. 6.
Preclinical and clinical results of metformin in targeting aging and aging-related diseases.
| Aging and aging-related diseases | Preclinical and clinical results | |
|---|---|---|
| Aging and lifespan | Regulate the metabolism of HEK293T through lysosomal pathway | |
| Diabetes mellitus | Change the redox state of liver cells and reduce hepatic gluconeogenesis | |
| Degenerative musculoskeletal diseases | Osteoporosis | Enhance the differentiation and mineralization of osteoblast and inhibits osteoclast differentiation, prevent bone loss in ovariectomized rats |
| Osteoarthritis | Inhibit the expression of inflammatory factors, matrix metalloproteinases and hypertrophy markers in chondrocytes through bone marrow stromal stem cells in co-culture model | |
| Intervertebral disc degeneration | Protect nucleus pulposus cells against apoptosis and senescence or exert an anti-inflammatory effect; Reduce local mechanical hyperalgesia in the nucleus pulposus and annulus fibrosus | |
| Other bone disorders | Increase glycolytic activity and decrease the expression of inflammatory factors primary synovial fibroblast | |
| Cardiovascular disease | Coronary heart disease | Protect hyperglycemia-induced endothelial impairment |
| Heart failure | Reduce myocardial oxygen consumption and left ventricular mass index, left ventricular mass, office systolic blood pressure and oxidative stress in patients | |
| Heart attack combined with pulmonary hypertension | Benefit rats in a rodent model of metabolic syndrome and pulmonary hypertension associated with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction | |
| Neurodegenerative diseases | Alzheimer's disease | Prevent patients from Alzheimer's disease |
| Huntington's disease | Rescue the motor and neuropsychiatric phenotypes of Huntington's disease in zQ175 knock-in mouse | |
| Parkinson's disease | Reduce the risk of Parkinson's disease | |
| Obesity and other metabolic abnormalities | Obesity | Inhibit adipogenesis in adipocytes |
| Fatty liver disease | Improve fatty liver disease, reversing steatosis and aminotransferase abnormalities | |
| Other diseases | Polycystic ovary syndrome | Induce ovulation in women with the polycystic ovary syndrome |
| Chronic kidney disease | Metformin could have benefits on kidney disease progression and may lower the risk of death | |
| COVID-19 | Reduce the Mortality of patients with COVID-19 | |
| Hidradenitis suppurativa | Metformin is an effective treatment option for hidradenitis suppurativa | |
Figure 2The effect of metformin in the treatment of musculoskeletal diseases. Metformin plays an important role in the treatment of musculoskeletal diseases such as osteoarthritis (OA), osteoporosis (OP), intervertebral disc degeneration (IVDD), periodontitis (PD), ankylosing spondylitis (AS), rheumatoid arthritis (RA), osteosarcoma (OS) by inhibiting the effect of inflammatory response, cartilage degeneration, mechanical hyperalgesia, cellular senescence, osteoclastic activity, oxidative stress, fibroblast ossification, cellular proliferation and migration, reducing body weight or improving osteogenic activity.
Effect of metformin in targeting cancers.
| Types of cancer | Research object | Effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bladder cancer | Human cell lines (UMUC3 and J82 cells) | Block bladder cancer growth and survival through SREBP-1c/FASN axis by targeting the expression of clusterin. |
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| Lung cancer | Human (Clinical research) | Associated with low risk of lung cancer; Co-treatment with EGFR-TKIs therapy could improve progression-free survival in patients with advanced lung adenocarcinoma. | |
| Colorectal cancer | Human (Meta-analysis) | Reduce the risk of colorectal cancer and improve the survival rate of colorectal cancer patients. |
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| Leukemia | Human cell lines (MMCLs) | Co-treatment with bortezomib could enhance the anti-myeloma effect of it leading to delaying the growth of myeloma xenotransplants. |
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| Breast cancer | Human (Clinical research) | Metformin could reduce the risk of breast cancer based on patient's hormone levels. | |
| Esophageal cancer | Human (Clinical research: cohort study) | Metformin use decreases the risk of developing esophageal cancer, especially in new metformin users and participants aged 60-69 years. |
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| Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma | Human (Clinical research) | The effect of metformin to treat pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma is mixed. | |
| Endometrial cancer | Human (Clinical research: Phase 2 Randomized Clinical Trial) | Co-treatment with everolimus, letrozole could result in a higher rate of clinical benefit for women with advanced or recurrent endometrial cancer. |
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| Melanoma | Human cell lines (A2058 and A375) | Inhibit melanoma cancer cell motility and growth through inducing cell cycle arrest and promoting cell apoptosis. |
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| Thyroid Cancer | Human cell lines (FTC133 and BCPAP) | Inhibit growth of thyroid cancer cells by downregulating the expression of mGPDH and inhibiting OXPHOS |
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| Osteosarcoma | Human and mice cell lines (MG63 and K7M2) | Suppress the self-renew of osteosarcoma stem cells through ROS-mediated apoptosis and autophagy. |
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| Primary bone cancer | Human (Clinical research: retrospective cohort study) | Reduce the risk of primary bone cancer in men with T2D aged more than 60 years. |
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| Hepatocellular carcinoma | Human cell lines (HepG2 and Huh7 and 293FT) | Suppress the growth and increase cell death of hepatocellular carcinoma cells by elevating oxidative phosphorylation. |
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| Gastric Cancer | Human (Clinical research) | Decrease the cancer-specific mortality rates, recurrence and all-cause mortality of gastric cancer patients with diabetes who underwent gastrectomy. |
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| Ovarian Cancer | Human cell lines (SKOV3, OVCAR3 and HO8910) | Induce cancer cells apoptosis through triggering endoplasmic reticulum stress. |
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| Kidney cancer | Human (Clinical research: cohort study) | Reduce the risk of kidney cancer in patients with type 2 diabetes. |
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| Prostate cancer | Human (Clinical research: cohort study) | Reduce the risk of prostate cancer among men with type 2 diabetes. |
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Clinical trials using metformin for targeting biological aging.
| NCT number | Title | Conditions | Characteristics of biological aging (Outcome Measures) |
|---|---|---|---|
| NCT03309007 | A Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Trial of Anti-Aging, Pro-Autophagy Effects of Metformin in Adults with Prediabetes | PreDiabetes, Aging | Change in leucocyte LC3 score |
| NCT04994561 | VIAging Deceleration Trial Using Metformin, Dasatinib, Rapamycin and Nutritional Supplements | Aging | Senescent cell-cycle arrest physiological parameter value measured by MMP-9 laboratory test; Glucose control (insulin resistance) physiological parameter as measured by HOMA-IR (mg/dL) calculation value; and etc. |
| NCT02432287 | Metformin in Longevity Study (MILES) | Aging | Increase in number of expressed genes in muscle and adipose tissue using RNA sequencing; Mixed meal tolerance. Assessment of insulin sensitivity and insulin secretion |
| NCT02308228 | Metformin to Augment Strength Training Effective Response in Seniors (MASTERS) | Aging | Percent change in type 2 myofiber cross sectional area; Percent change in normal density muscle size by computed tomography |
| NCT04264897 | Antecedent Metabolic Health and Metformin Aging Study | Aging, Insulin Sensitivity, Chronic Disease, Mitochondria, Insulin Resistance | Mean change in insulin sensitivity measure, mitochondrial function of the electron transport system measured by complex I activity, daily average glucose measure, and blood-based biomarker measures of aging |
| NCT03451006 | Effect of Metformin on Frailty in 12 Subjects | Aging, Inflammation, Frailty | Change in frailty, interleukin 6 (pg/mL), matrix metalloproteinase (ng/mL), plasminogen activator inhibitor, monocyte chemotactic protein-1, activin, and etc. |
| NCT03713801 | Impact of Metformin on Immunity | Aging, Vaccine Response Impaired | Change in antibody responses to PCV13; Measure of immunophenotypes |
| NCT03072485 | Phase 1 Study of the Effects of Combining Topical FDA approved Drugs on Age-related Pathways on the Skin of Healthy Volunteers | Aging | Profile of gene transcript changes; Wrinkle score |
| NCT03996538 | Vaccination Efficacy with Metformin in Older Adults | Aging, Age-Related Immunodeficiency, Vaccine Response Impaired | Change in cell-mediated flu vaccine responses, Cell-mediated flu vaccine responses, influenza antibody titers, T cell metabolic phenotype, T cell oxygen consumption rate, frailty phenotype |
| NCT02745886 | Metformin Induces a Dietary Restriction-like State in Human | Overweight Subjects, Metformin, Aging | The differences of gene expression profile among 3 groups, insulin sensitivity in 3 groups |
| NCT04221750 | Diet and Exercise Plus Metformin to Treat Frailty in Obese Seniors | Frailty, Sarcopenic Obesity, Aging | Change in the modified physical performance test, muscle strength, dynamic balance, static balance, gait speed, peak aerobic power, lean body mass body fat, thigh muscle, thigh fat, and etc. |
| NCT03107884 | Role of Metformin on Muscle Health of Older Adults | Muscle Atrophy, Insulin Resistance | Muscle size; Insulin sensitivity |
| NCT01765946 | Metformin and Longevity Genes in Prediabetes | Insulin Resistance, Prediabetes, Aging, Inflammation | Longevity gene expression; Insulin sensitivity; Monocyte polarization status |
| NCT04375657 | Thymus Regeneration, Immunorestoration, and Insulin Mitigation Extension Trial | Epigenetic Aging, Immunosenescence | Epigenetic age; Thymus regeneration; Safety and tolerability; Immunosenescence |
Figure 3Targets of metformin among the hallmarks of aging. Metformin attenuates aging and aging-related diseases by targeting nine hallmarks of aging, including (1) four primary hallmarks (loss of proteostasis, telomere attrition, genomic instability and epigenetic alterations); (2) three antagonistic hallmarks (deregulated nutrient sensing, mitochondrial dysfunction, and cellular senescence); (3) two integrative hallmarks (altered intercellular communication and stem cell exhaustion).
Figure 4Multiple pathways of metformin targeting aging and aging-related diseases. Metformin alleviates aging and aging-related diseases by targeting aging hallmarks through following signaling pathways: (1) Metformin is transported into cells through organic transporter 1 (OCT1). Then metformin inhibits mitochondrial respiratory-chain complex 1 and thereby oxidative phosphorylation, resulting in increased AMP/ATP and NAD+/NADH ratios, causing activation of AMPK and up-regulation of SIRT1. AMPK-dependent mechanisms lead to the inhibition of mTOR, reactive oxygen species (ROS), DNA Methylation (DNMT) and histone acetyltransferase (HAT)/ histone deacetylase (HDAC), and the increase of PGC1α and DICER1. Metformin also up-regulates ataxic telangiectasis mutation (ATM) protein kinase and nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (Nrf2), contributing to the inhibition of DNA damage and increase of glutathione peroxidase 7 (GPx7). (2) Metformin regulates the insulin and IGF-1 signaling and thereby the phosphorylation of insulin receptor substrate-1/2 (IRS-1/2) and PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling. Activation of AMPK also inhibits mTOR signaling. (3) Metformin inhibits NF-κB signaling induced by pro-inflammatory cytokines. Up-regulation of SIRT1 further inhibits NF-κB signaling. Adapted from Kulkarni et al7.