Abstract
ABSTRACT Metformin is an antidiabetic drug widely used for the treatment of type 2 diabetes. Growing evidence suggests that it may exert antitumor effects in vivo and in vitro. However, even with the promising potency on defeating cancer cells, the pre-clinical and epidemiological studies of metformin on various kinds of cancers are not satisfactory, and the reasons and underlying mechanisms remain unknown. Since cancer is a complex system, dependent on a promoting microenvironment, we hypothesize that the interactions between cancer cells and their neighborhood fibroblasts are essential for metformin resistance. To test this, we used a cell co-culture model closely mimicking the in vivo interactions and metabolic exchanges between normal stromal cells (NOFs) and oral squamous cancer cells (OSCC). Here we show that while metformin can significantly inhibit cell growth and induce apoptosis of OSCC cultured alone in a dose-dependent manner through activating p-AMPKT172 and modulating Bcl-2, Bax, and cleaved PARP. However, when OSCC are co-cultured with NOFs the metformin effects on OSCC cells are annihilated. NOFs are rescuing OSCC from metformin – induced apoptosis, at least partially, through inhibiting the activity of AMPK and PARP, maintaining mitochondrial membrane potential and increasing the oxidative stress. Our results indicate that metformin effects on oral cancer cells are modulated by the microenvironment and that this has to be taken into consideration in the context of developing a new combination of drugs for oral cancer treatment.
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