Solid tumors, including the aggressive primary brain cancer glioblastoma multiforme, develop resistance to cell death, in part as a result of a switch from mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation to cytoplasmic glycolysis. This metabolic remodeling is accompanied by mitochondrial hyperpolarization. We tested whether the small-molecule and orphan drug dichloroacetate (DCA) can reverse this cancer-specific metabolic and mitochondrial remodeling in glioblastoma. Freshly isolated glioblastomas from 49 patients showed mitochondrial hyperpolarization, which was rapidly reversed by DCA. In a separate experiment with five patients who had glioblastoma, we prospectively secured baseline and serial tumor tissue, developed patient-specific cell lines of glioblastoma and putative glioblastoma stem cells (CD133(+), nestin(+) cells), and treated each patient with oral DCA for up to 15 months. DCA depolarized mitochondria, increased mitochondrial reactive oxygen species, and induced apoptosis in GBM cells, as well as in putative GBM stem cells, both in vitro and in vivo. DCA therapy also inhibited the hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha, promoted p53 activation, and suppressed angiogenesis both in vivo and in vitro. The dose-limiting toxicity was a dose-dependent, reversible peripheral neuropathy, and there was no hematologic, hepatic, renal, or cardiac toxicity. Indications of clinical efficacy were present at a dose that did not cause peripheral neuropathy and at serum concentrations of DCA sufficient to inhibit the target enzyme of DCA, pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase II, which was highly expressed in all glioblastomas. Metabolic modulation may be a viable therapeutic approach in the treatment of glioblastoma.
The unique metabolism of most solid tumours (aerobic glycolysis, i.e., Warburg effect) is not only the basis of diagnosing cancer with metabolic imaging but might also be associated with the resistance to apoptosis that characterises cancer. The glycolytic phenotype in cancer appears to be the common denominator of diverse molecular abnormalities in cancer and may be associated with a (potentially reversible) suppression of mitochondrial function. The generic drug dichloroacetate is an orally available small molecule that, by inhibiting the pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase, increases the flux of pyruvate into the mitochondria, promoting glucose oxidation over glycolysis. This reverses the suppressed mitochondrial apoptosis in cancer and results in suppression of tumour growth in vitro and in vivo. Here, we review the scientific and clinical rationale supporting the rapid translation of this promising metabolic modulator in early-phase cancer clinical trials.
In pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), antiapoptotic, proliferative, and inflammatory diatheses converge to create an obstructive vasculopathy. A selective down-regulation of the Kv channel Kv1.5 has been described in human and animal PAH. The resultant increase in intracellular free Ca 2؉ ([Ca 2؉ ]i) and K ؉ ([K ؉ ]i) concentrations explains the pulmonary artery smooth muscle cell (PASMC) contraction, proliferation and resistance to apoptosis. The recently described PASMC hyperpolarized mitochondria and increased bcl-2 levels also contribute to apoptosis resistance in PAH. The cause of the Kv1.5, mitochondrial, and inflammatory abnormalities remains unknown. We hypothesized that these abnormalities can be explained in part by an activation of NFAT (nuclear factor of activated T cells), a Ca 2؉ / calcineurin-sensitive transcription factor. We studied PASMC and lungs from six patients with and four without PAH and blood from 23 PAH patients and 10 healthy volunteers.
Background-Sildenafil was recently approved for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension. The beneficial effects of phosphodiesterase type 5 (PDE5) inhibitors in pulmonary arterial hypertension are thought to result from relatively selective vasodilatory and antiproliferative effects on the pulmonary vasculature and, on the basis of early data showing lack of significant PDE5 expression in the normal heart, are thought to spare the myocardium. Methods and Results-We studied surgical specimens from 9 patients and show here for the first time that although PDE5is not expressed in the myocardium of the normal human right ventricle (RV), mRNA and protein are markedly upregulated in hypertrophied RV (RVH) myocardium. PDE5 also is upregulated in rat RVH. PDE5 inhibition (with either MY-5445 or sildenafil) significantly increases contractility, measured in the perfused heart (modified Langendorff preparation) and isolated cardiomyocytes, in RVH but not normal RV. PDE5 inhibition leads to increases in both cGMP and cAMP in RVH but not normal RV. Protein kinase G activity is suppressed in RVH, explaining why the PDE5 inhibitor-induced increase in cGMP does not lead to inhibition of contractility. Rather, it leads to inhibition of the cGMP-sensitive PDE3, explaining the increase in cAMP and contractility. This is further supported by our findings that, in RVH protein kinase A, inhibition completely inhibits PDE5-induced inotropy, whereas protein kinase G inhibition does not. Conclusions-The ability of PDE5 inhibitors to increase RV inotropy and to decrease RV afterload without significantly affecting systemic hemodynamics makes them ideal for the treatment of diseases affecting the RV, including pulmonary arterial hypertension. (Circulation. 2007;116:238-248.)
Background-The prognosis and functional capacity of patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is poor, and there is a need for safe, effective, inexpensive oral treatments. A single dose of sildenafil, an oral phosphodiesterase type-5 (PD-5) inhibitor, is an effective and selective pulmonary vasodilator in PAH. However, the long-term effects of PD-5 inhibition and its mechanism of action in human pulmonary arteries (PAs) are unknown. Methods and Results-We hypothesized that 3 months of sildenafil (50 mg orally every 8 hours) added to standard treatment would be safe and improve functional capacity and hemodynamics in PAH patients. We studied 5 consecutive patients (4 with primary pulmonary hypertension, 1 with Eisenmenger's syndrome; New York Heart Association class II to III). Functional class improved by Ն1 class in all patients. Pretreatment versus posttreatment values (meanϮSEM) were as follows: 6-minute walk, 376Ϯ30 versus 504Ϯ27 m, PϽ0.0001; mean PA pressure, 70Ϯ3 versus 52Ϯ3 mm Hg, PϽ0.007; pulmonary vascular resistance index 1702Ϯ151 versus 996Ϯ92 dyne · s · cm Ϫ5 · m Ϫ2, PϽ0.006. The systemic arterial pressure was unchanged, and no adverse effects occurred. Sildenafil also reduced right ventricular mass measured by MRI. In 7 human PAs (6 cardiac transplant donors and 1 patient with PAH on autopsy), we showed that PD-5 is present in PA smooth muscle cells and that sildenafil causes relaxation by activating large-conductance, calcium-activated potassium channels. Figure 1. Short-term inhaled nitric oxide (iNO) reduces pulmonary vascular resistance in PAH, 4,5 but ambulatory delivery in humans is cumbersome. Another strategy is to prolong the survival of cGMP in PASMCs by inhibiting type-5 phosphodiesterase (PD-5), an isoform that is primarily located in the penis and lungs, which rapidly degrades cGMP. Because of PD-5's tissue distribution (pulmonaryϾsystemic vasculature), PD-5 inhibitors are attractive candidate pulmonary vasodilators that minimally decrease systemic blood pressure. (75 mg) is an effective and relatively selective pulmonary vasodilator. 4,5 We hypothesized that PD-5 inhibition acutely causes human PA dilatation, in part by opening of BK Ca channels, and that it chronically improves hemodynamics and functional capacity in moderately severe PAH. Conclusion-This MethodsWe studied 5 consecutive patients with PAH (nϭ4 New York Heart Association [NYHA] class III; patient 3 class II). All subjects provided informed consent. Patients with class IV PAH were excluded because they often require epoprostenol, which could confound the assessment of sildenafil's effects. All the patients had been stable for Ͼ3 months, and their standard therapy was not altered before initiation of sildenafil. All were on diuretics and coumadin, and patients 2 and 4 were on Ca 2ϩ channel blockers because they had been shown to respond to iNO with Ͼ20% decrease in pulmonary vascular resistance (Figure 2). No patient was taking nitrates. All patients had primary pulmonary hypertension (PPH) except patient 2, w...
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