Phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase as a putative target for anticancer action of clotrimazole
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The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology
Abstract
Clotrimazole (CTZ) has been proposed as an antitumoral agent because of its properties that inhibit gly colytic enzymes anddetachthemfromthe cytoskeleton.However,thebroadeffects ofthedrug, e.g., acting
on different enzymes and pathways, indicate that CTZ might also affect several signaling pathways. In this
study, we show that CTZ interferes with the human breast cancer cell line MCF-7 after a short incubation
period (4 h), thereby diminishing cell viability, promoting apoptosis, depolarizing mitochondria, inhibi ting key glycolytic regulatory enzymes, decreasing the intracellular ATP content, and permeating plasma
membranes. CTZ treatment also interferes with autophagy. Moreover, when the incubation is performed
under hypoxic conditions, certain effects of CTZ are enhanced, such as phosphatidylinositol-3-phosphate
kinase (PI3K), which is inhibited upon CTZ treatment; this inhibition is potentiated under hypoxia. CTZ induced PI3K inhibition is not caused by upstream effects of CTZ because the drug does not affect the
interaction of the PI3K regulatory subunit and the insulin receptor substrate (IRS)-1. Additionally, CTZ
directly inhibits human purified PI3K in a dose-dependent and reversible manner. Pharmacologic and
in silico results suggest that CTZ may bind to the PI3K catalytic site. Therefore, we conclude that PI3K
is a novel, putative target for the antitumoral effects of CTZ, interfering with autophagy, apoptosis, cell
division and viability.
Description
p. 132–141,: il. p&b.
Citation
FURTADO, Cristiane Marques et al. Phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase as a putative target for anticancer action of clotrimazole. The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology, v. 62, p. 132–141, 2015.