Clotrimazole Preferentially Inhibits Human Breast Cancer Cell Proliferation, Viability and Glycolysis
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PLoS One
Abstract
Clotrimazole is an azole derivative with promising anti-cancer effects. This drug interferes with the activity of
glycolytic enzymes altering their cellular distribution and inhibiting their activities. The aim of the present study was to
analyze the effects of clotrimazole on the growth pattern of breast cancer cells correlating with their metabolic profiles.
Methodology/Principal Findings: Three cell lines derived from human breast tissue (MCF10A, MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231)
that present increasingly aggressive profiles were used. Clotrimazole induces a dose-dependent decrease in glucose uptake
in all three cell lines, with Ki values of 114.3611.7, 77.167.8 and 37.864.2 mM for MCF10A, MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231,
respectively. Furthermore, the drug also decreases intracellular ATP content and inhibits the major glycolytic enzymes,
hexokinase, phosphofructokinase-1 and pyruvate kinase, especially in the highly metastatic cell line, MDA-MB-231. In this
last cell lineage, clotrimazole attenuates the robust migratory response, an effect that is progressively attenuated in MCF-7
and MCF10A, respectively. Moreover, clotrimazole reduces the viability of breast cancer cells, which is more pronounced on
MDA-MB-231.
Conclusions/Significance: Clotrimazole presents deleterious effects on two human breast cancer cell lines metabolism,
growth and migration, where the most aggressive cell line is more affected by the drug. Moreover, clotrimazole presents
little or no effect on a non-tumor human breast cell line. These results suggest, at least for these three cell lines studied, that
the more aggressive the cell is the more effective clotrimazole is.
Description
2012;7(2):e30462