Itraconazole-Induced Inhibition on Human Esophageal Cancer Cell Growth Requires AMPK Activation

作者:Chen, Min-Bin; Liu, Yuan-Yuan; Xing, Zhao-Yu; Zhang, Zhi-Qing; Jiang, Qin*; Lu, Pei-Hua*; Cao, Cong*
来源:Molecular Cancer Therapeutics, 2018, 17(6): 1229-1239.
DOI:10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-17-1094

摘要

We here evaluated the antiesophageal cancer cell activity by the antifungal drug itraconazole. Our results show that mg/mL concentrations of itraconazole potently inhibited survival and proliferation of established (TE-1 and Eca-109) and primary human esophageal cancer cells. Itraconazole activated AMPK signaling, which was required for subsequent esophageal cancer cell death. Pharmacologic AMPK inhibition, AMPKa1 shRNA, or dominant negative mutation (T172A) almost completely abolished itraconazole-induced cytotoxicity against esophageal cancer cells. Significantly, itraconazole induced AMPK-dependent autophagic cell death (but not apoptosis) in esophageal cancer cells. Furthermore, AMPK activation by itraconazole induced multiple receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs: EGFR, PDGFRa, and PDGFRb), lysosomal translocation, and degradation to inhibit downstream Akt activation. In vivo, itraconazole oral gavage potently inhibited Eca-109 tumor growth in SCID mice. It was yet ineffective against AMPKa1 shRNA-expressing Eca-109 tumors. The in vivo growth of the primary human esophageal cancer cells was also significantly inhibited by itraconazole administration. AMPK activation, RTK degradation, and Akt inhibition were observed in itraconazole-treated tumors. Together, itraconazole inhibits esophageal cancer cell growth via activating AMPK signaling.