STAT1 potentiates oxidative stress revealing a targetable vulnerability that increases phenformin efficacy in breast cancer.
Stephanie P TottenYoung Kyuen ImEduardo Cepeda CañedoOuafa NajybAlice Quynh Huong NguyenSteven HébertRyuhjin AhnKyle LewisBenjamin LebeauRachel La SelvaValérie SabourinConstanza MartínezPaul SavageHellen KuasneDaina AvizonisNancy Santos MartínezCatherine ChabotAdriana Aguilar-MahechaMarie-Line GouletMatthew DanknerMichael WitcherKevin PetreccaMark BasikMichael PollakIvan TopisirovicRongtuan LinPeter M SiegelClaudia L KleinmanMorag ParkJulie St-PierreJosie Ursini-SiegelPublished in: Nature communications (2021)
Bioenergetic perturbations driving neoplastic growth increase the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), requiring a compensatory increase in ROS scavengers to limit oxidative stress. Intervention strategies that simultaneously induce energetic and oxidative stress therefore have therapeutic potential. Phenformin is a mitochondrial complex I inhibitor that induces bioenergetic stress. We now demonstrate that inflammatory mediators, including IFNγ and polyIC, potentiate the cytotoxicity of phenformin by inducing a parallel increase in oxidative stress through STAT1-dependent mechanisms. Indeed, STAT1 signaling downregulates NQO1, a key ROS scavenger, in many breast cancer models. Moreover, genetic ablation or pharmacological inhibition of NQO1 using β-lapachone (an NQO1 bioactivatable drug) increases oxidative stress to selectively sensitize breast cancer models, including patient derived xenografts of HER2+ and triple negative disease, to the tumoricidal effects of phenformin. We provide evidence that therapies targeting ROS scavengers increase the anti-neoplastic efficacy of mitochondrial complex I inhibitors in breast cancer.