Abstract

Vicious cycles of mutations and reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation contribute to cancer progression. The use of antioxidants to inhibit ROS generation promotes cytostasis by affecting the mutation cycle and ROS-dependent survival signaling. However, cancer cells select mutations to elevate ROS albeit maintaining mitochondrial hyperpolarization (Δψm), even under hypoxia. From this perspective, the use of drugs that disrupt both ROS generation and Δψm is a viable anticancer strategy. Hence, we studied the effects of mitochondrially targeted carboxy proxyl nitroxide (Mito-CP) and a control ten carbon TPP moiety (Dec-TPP+) in the human Burkitt lymphoma cell line (Daudi) and normal peripheral blood mononuclear cells under hypoxia and normoxia. We found preferential localization, Δψm and adenosine triphosphate loss, and significant cytotoxicity by Mito-CP in Daudi cells alone. Interestingly, ROS levels were decreased and maintained in hypoxic and normoxic cancer cells, respectively, by Mito-CP but not Dec-TPP+, therefore preventing any adaptive signaling. Moreover, dual effects on mitochondrial bioenergetics and ROS by Mito-CP curtailed the cancer survival via Akt inhibition, AMPK-HIF-1α activation and promoted apoptosis via increased BCL2-associated X protein and poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase expression. This dual mode of action by Mito-CP provides a better explanation of the application of antioxidants with specific relevance to cancerous transformation and adaptations in the Daudi cell line.

Highlights

  • Cancer is a metabolic disease, the metabolic alterations and proliferation of which are caused by oncogenic mutations and/or oncogenic viruses

  • We investigated the mode of action of a mitochondrial membrane potential dependent antioxidant (Mito-CP) on cancerous Daudi cells and normal peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs)

  • PBMCs treated with mitochondrially targeted carboxy proxyl nitroxide (Mito-CP) showed less significant decrease (P

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Summary

Introduction

Cancer is a metabolic disease, the metabolic alterations and proliferation of which are caused by oncogenic mutations and/or oncogenic viruses. Alterations within the cancer niche are not coordinated with the surrounding normal cells; this affects their homeostasis [1]. A model cell line for endemic Burkitt’s lymphoma, is strongly associated with the Epstein Barr virus (EBV), an oncogenic virus. Each Daudi cell contains about 80 copies of EBV.

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