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Targeting lonidamine to mitochondria mitigates lung tumorigenesis and brain metastasis

Author

Listed:
  • Gang Cheng

    (Medical College of Wisconsin
    Medical College of Wisconsin
    Medical College of Wisconsin)

  • Qi Zhang

    (Medical College of Wisconsin
    Medical College of Wisconsin)

  • Jing Pan

    (Medical College of Wisconsin
    Medical College of Wisconsin)

  • Yongik Lee

    (Medical College of Wisconsin)

  • Olivier Ouari

    (CNRS)

  • Micael Hardy

    (CNRS)

  • Monika Zielonka

    (Medical College of Wisconsin
    Medical College of Wisconsin)

  • Charles R. Myers

    (Medical College of Wisconsin
    Medical College of Wisconsin)

  • Jacek Zielonka

    (Medical College of Wisconsin
    Medical College of Wisconsin
    Medical College of Wisconsin)

  • Katherine Weh

    (University of Michigan)

  • Andrew C. Chang

    (University of Michigan)

  • Guoan Chen

    (University of Michigan)

  • Laura Kresty

    (University of Michigan)

  • Balaraman Kalyanaraman

    (Medical College of Wisconsin
    Medical College of Wisconsin
    Medical College of Wisconsin)

  • Ming You

    (Medical College of Wisconsin
    Medical College of Wisconsin)

Abstract

Lung cancer often has a poor prognosis, with brain metastases a major reason for mortality. We modified lonidamine (LND), an antiglycolytic drug with limited efficacy, to mitochondria-targeted mito-lonidamine (Mito-LND) which is 100-fold more potent. Mito-LND, a tumor-selective inhibitor of oxidative phosphorylation, inhibits mitochondrial bioenergetics in lung cancer cells and mitigates lung cancer cell viability, growth, progression, and metastasis of lung cancer xenografts in mice. Mito-LND blocks lung tumor development and brain metastasis by inhibiting mitochondrial bioenergetics, stimulating the formation of reactive oxygen species, oxidizing mitochondrial peroxiredoxin, inactivating AKT/mTOR/p70S6K signaling, and inducing autophagic cell death in lung cancer cells. Mito-LND causes no toxicity in mice even when administered for eight weeks at 50 times the effective cancer inhibitory dose. Collectively, these findings show that mitochondrial targeting of LND is a promising therapeutic approach for investigating the role of autophagy in mitigating lung cancer development and brain metastasis.

Suggested Citation

  • Gang Cheng & Qi Zhang & Jing Pan & Yongik Lee & Olivier Ouari & Micael Hardy & Monika Zielonka & Charles R. Myers & Jacek Zielonka & Katherine Weh & Andrew C. Chang & Guoan Chen & Laura Kresty & Balar, 2019. "Targeting lonidamine to mitochondria mitigates lung tumorigenesis and brain metastasis," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 10(1), pages 1-14, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:10:y:2019:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-019-10042-1
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-10042-1
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