Potent anti-proliferative effects of metformin on trastuzumab-resistant breast cancer cells via inhibition of erbB2/IGF-1 receptor interactions.

2011 
We have shown that erbB2 altered breast cancer cells are less sensitive to the anti-proliferative effects of metformin than triple negative cells, and have described the differences of molecular mechanisms of metformin action by tumor subtypes. We hypothesized that metformin may be more effective against trastuzumab-resistant erbB2-overexpressing breast cancer cells because it targets the critical signaling pathways that are altered with resistance. BT474, SKBR3 and derived trastuzumab-resistant sublines BT474-HR20 (HR20) and SKBR3-pool2 (pool2) were used to test this hypothesis. Metformin treatment resulted in significantly more inhibition of proliferation and clonogenicity in resistant sublines. It decreased erbB2/insulin-like growth factor-1 receptor (IGF-1R) complexes (present only in the resistant sublines) without altering erbB2 expression, and reduced the expression and activity of erbB3 and IGF-1R in the trastuzumab-resistant but not parental cells. Trastuzumab-resistant sublines were resistant to...
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