Combination of Antiretroviral Drugs Zidovudine and Efavirenz Impairs Tumor Growths in a Mouse Model of Cancer.
Marcel A SchneiderAnton A BuzdinAchim WeberPierre-Alain ClavienPieter BorgerPublished in: Viruses (2021)
LINE1 retrotransposons, which are thought to be the remnants of ancient integrations of retrovirus-like elements, are aberrantly (re)activated in many cancer cells. Due to LINE1-induced alterations in target gene expression and/or chromosomal rearrangements, they may be important drivers of tumorigenesis. Moreover, LINE1 encoded proteins, Open Reading Frame (ORF)1 and ORF2, may have pro-oncogenic potential through inductors of oncogenic transcription factors or inhibitors of cell cycle suppressors. The current study therefore aimed to investigate in vitro and in vivo anti-tumorigenic effects of two well-known antiretroviral drugs, zidovudine, a nucleoside analogue inhibitor of RT (NRTI), and efavirenz, a non-nucleoside RT inhibitor (NNRTI). Our data demonstrate that both drugs in clinically relevant doses significantly reduced the proliferation of murine and human cancer cell lines, as well as growth of tumors in a murine subcutaneous model. Intriguingly, we found that the combination of both zidovudine and efavirenz almost entirely blocked tumorigenesis in vivo. Because both drugs are FDA-approved agents and the combination was very well tolerated in mice, the combination therapy as presented in our paper might be an opportunity to treat colorectal tumors and metastasis to the liver in an inexpensive way.
Keyphrases
- hiv infected
- cell cycle
- hiv infected patients
- antiretroviral therapy
- combination therapy
- transcription factor
- gene expression
- papillary thyroid
- mouse model
- human immunodeficiency virus
- hiv aids
- squamous cell
- hiv positive
- endothelial cells
- dna methylation
- signaling pathway
- squamous cell carcinoma
- lymph node metastasis
- copy number
- childhood cancer
- hepatitis c virus
- genome wide
- data analysis
- artificial intelligence
- dna binding
- pluripotent stem cells