Reprograming of energy metabolism
is a major hallmark of cancer,
but its effective intervention is still a challenging task due to
metabolic heterogeneity and plasticity of cancer cells. Herein, we
report a general redox-based strategy for meeting the challenge. The
strategy was exemplified by a dietary curcumin analogue (MitoCur-1)
that was designed to target mitochondria (MitoCur-1). By virtue of
its electrophilic and mitochondrial-targeting properties, MitoCur-1
generated reactive oxygen species (ROS) more effectively and selectively
in HepG2 cells than in L02 cells via the inhibition of mitochondrial
antioxidative thioredoxin reductase 2 (TrxR2). The ROS generation
preferentially mediated the energy crisis of HepG2 cells in a dual-inhibition
fashion against both mitochondrial and glycolytic metabolisms, which
could hit the metabolic plasticity of HepG2 cells. The ROS-dependent
energy crisis also allowed its preferential killing of HepG2 cells
(IC50 = 1.4 μM) over L02 cells (IC50 =
9.1 μM), via induction of cell-cycle arrest, apoptosis and autophagic
death, and its high antitumor efficacy in vivo, in nude mice bearing
HepG2 tumors (15 mg/kg). These results highlight that inhibiting mitochondrial
TrxR2 to produce ROS by electrophiles is a promising redox-based strategy
for the effective intervention of cancer cell energy metabolic reprograming.
Curcumin, derived from the dietary spice turmeric, holds promise for cancer prevention. This prompts much interest in investigating the action mechanisms of curcumin and its analogues. Two symmetrical hexamethoxy-diarylpentadienones (1 and 2) as cucumin analogues were reported to possess significantly enhanced cytotoxicity compared with the parent molecule. However, the detailed mechanisms remain unclear. In this study, compounds 1 and 2 were identified as the G2/M cell cycle arrest agents to mediate the cytotoxicity toward NCI-H460 cells via Michael acceptor-dependent redox intervention. Compared with curcumin, they could more easily induce a burst of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and collapse of the redox buffering system. One possible reason is that they could more effectively target intracellular TrxR to convert this antioxidant enzyme into a ROS promoter. Additionally, they caused up-regulation of p53 and p21 and down-regulation of redox-sensitive Cdc25C along with cyclin B1/Cdk1 in a Michael acceptor- and ROS-dependent fashion. Interestingly, in comparison with compound 2, compound 1 displayed a relatively weak ability to generate ROS but increased cell cycle arrest activity and cytotoxicity probably due to its Michael acceptor-dependent microtubule-destabilizing effect and greater GST-inhibitory activity, as well as its enhanced cellular uptake. This work provides useful information for understanding Michael acceptor-dependent and redox-mediated cytotoxic mechanisms of curcumin and its active analogues.
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