Metformin prevention of doxorubicin resistance in MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 involves oxidative stress generation and modulation of cell adaptation genes
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Scientific Reports
Abstract
Metformin was shown to sensitize multidrug resistant breast cancer cells; however, the mechanisms
involved in this capacity need to be clarifed. We investigated oxidative stress and infammatory-related
pathways during the induction of doxorubicin resistance in MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 human breast
cancer cells (DOX-res group), and evaluated metformin-induced cellular responses that resulted in the
prevention of doxorubicin resistance (Met-DOX group). Microarray analysis demonstrated that DOX-
res changed the expression of genes involved in oxidative stress (OS) and the TGF- β1 pathway. The
DOX-res group presented increased thiols and reduced lipoperoxidation, increased levels of nitric oxide,
nuclear NF-kB and Nrf2, and reduced nuclear p53 labelling. Analysis of the TGF-β1 signaling pathway by
RT-PCR array showed that DOX-res developed adaptive responses, such as resistance against apoptosis
and OS. Metformin treatment modifed gene expression related to OS and the IFN-α signaling pathway.
The Met-DOX group was more sensitive to DOX-induced OS, presented lower levels of nitric oxide,
nuclear NF-kB and Nrf2, and increased nuclear p53. Analysis of the IFN-α signaling pathway showed
that Met-DOX presented more sensitivity to apoptosis and OS. Our fndings indicate that metformin
is a promising tool in the prevention of chemoresistance in patients with breast cancer submitted to
doxorubicin-based treatments.