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Synergistic effect of metformin and vemurufenib (PLX4032) as a molecular targeted therapy in anaplastic thyroid cancer: an in vitro study.

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BACKGROUND Survival rate of patients affected with anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC) is less than 5% with current treatment. In ATC, BRAFV600E mutation is the major mutation that results in the… Click to show full abstract

BACKGROUND Survival rate of patients affected with anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC) is less than 5% with current treatment. In ATC, BRAFV600E mutation is the major mutation that results in the transformation of normal cells in to an undifferentiated cancer cells via aberrant molecular signaling mechanisms. Although vemurufenib is a selective oral drug for the BRAFV600E mutant kinase with a response rate of nearly 50% in metastatic melanoma, our study has showed resistance to this drug in ATC. Hence the rationale of the study is to explore combinational therapeutic effect to improve the efficacy of vemurafenib along with metformin. Metformin, a diabetic drug is an AMPK activator and has recently proved to be involved in preventing or treating several types of cancer. METHODS AND RESULTS Using iGEMDock software, a protein-ligand interaction was successful between Metformin and TSHR (receptor present in the thyroid follicular cells). Our study demonstrates that combination of vemurufenib with metformin has synergistic anti-cancer effects which was evaluated through MTT assay (cytotoxicity), colony formation assay (antiproliferation evaluation) and suppressed the progression of ATC cells growth by inducing significant apoptosis, proven by Annexin V-FITC assay (Early Apoptosis Detection). Downregulation of ERK signaling, upregulation of AMPK pathway and precision in epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) pathway which were assessed by RT-PCR and Western blot provide the evidence that the combination of drugs involved in the precision of altered molecular signaling Further our results suggest that Metformin act as a demethylating agent in anaplastic thyroid cancer cells by inducing the expression of NIS and TSHR. Our study for the first time explored cAMP signaling in ATC wherein cAMP signaling is downregulated due to decrease in intracellular cAMP level upon metformin treatment. CONCLUSION To conclude, our findings demonstrate novel therapeutic targets and treatment strategies for undifferentiated ATC.

Keywords: anaplastic thyroid; metformin; study; thyroid cancer; cancer

Journal Title: Molecular biology reports
Year Published: 2021

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