Oxidative phosphorylation inhibitors inhibit proliferation of endometriosis cells

Author:

Kapur Arvinder1,Ayuso Jose M23,Rehman Shujah4,Kumari Santosh3,Felder Mildred1,Stenerson Zach5,Skala Melisa C46,Beebe Dave26,Barroilhet Lisa1,Patankar Manish S17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA

2. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA

3. Department of Dermatology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA

4. Morgridge Institute for Research, Madison, Wisconsin, USA

5. University of Wisconsin Paul P. Carbone Comprehensive Cancer Center, Madison, Wisconsin, USA

6. Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA

7. William S. Middleton Memorial Veterans’ Hospital, Madison, Wisconsin, USA

Abstract

In brief Developing novel therapies to cure and manage endometriosis is a major unmet need that will benefit over 180 million women worldwide. Results from the current study suggest that inhibitors of oxidative phosphorylation may serve as novel agents for the treatment of endometriosis. Abstract Current therapeutic strategies for endometriosis focus on symptom management and are not curative. Here, we provide evidence supporting the inhibition of oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) as a novel treatment strategy for endometriosis. Additionally, we report an organotypic organ-on-a-chip luminal model for endometriosis. The OXPHOS inhibitors, curcumin, plumbagin, and the FDA-approved anti-malarial agent, atovaquone, were tested against the endometriosis cell line, 12Z, in conventional as well as the new organotypic model. The results suggest that all three compounds inhibit proliferation and cause cell death of the endometriotic cells by inhibiting OXPHOS and causing an increase in intracellular oxygen radicals. The oxidative stress mediated by curcumin, plumbagin, and atovaquone causes DNA double-strand breaks as indicated by the elevation of phospho-γH2Ax. Mitochondrial energetics shows a significant decrease in oxygen consumption in 12Z cells. These experiments also highlight differences in the mechanism of action as curcumin and plumbagin inhibit complex I whereas atovaquone blocks complexes I, II, and III. Real-time assessment of cells in the lumen model showed inhibition of migration in response to the test compounds. Additionally, using two-photon lifetime imaging, we demonstrate that the 12Z cells in the lumen show decreased redox ratio (NAD(P)H/FAD) and lower fluorescence lifetime of NAD(P)H in the treated cells confirming major metabolic changes in response to inhibition of mitochondrial electron transport. The robust chemotoxic responses observed with atovaquone suggest that this anti-malarial agent may be repurposed for the effective treatment of endometriosis.

Publisher

Bioscientifica

Subject

Cell Biology,Obstetrics and Gynecology,Endocrinology,Embryology,Reproductive Medicine

Reference52 articles.

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3. Organotypic microfluidic breast cancer model reveals starvation-induced spatial-temporal metabolic adaptations;Ayuso,2018

4. Microfluidic tumor-on-a-chip model to evaluate the role of tumor environmental stress on NK cell exhaustion;Ayuso,2021

5. Oxidation-reduction ratio studies of mitochondria in freeze-trapped samples. NADH and flavoprotein fluorescence signals;Chance,1979

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