- Guo, Zhijun;
- Sevrioukova, Irina;
- Denisov, Ilia;
- Zhang, Xia;
- Chiu, Ting-Lan;
- Thomas, Dafydd;
- Hanse, Eric;
- Cuellar, Rebecca;
- Grinkova, Yelena;
- Langenfeld, Vanessa;
- Swedien, Daniel;
- Stamschror, Justin;
- Alvarez, Juan;
- Luna, Fernando;
- Galván, Adela;
- Bae, Young;
- Wulfkuhle, Julia;
- Gallagher, Rosa;
- Petricoin, Emanuel;
- Norris, Beverly;
- Flory, Craig;
- Schumacher, Robert;
- OSullivan, M;
- Cao, Qing;
- Chu, Haitao;
- Lipscomb, John;
- Atkins, William;
- Gupta, Kalpna;
- Kelekar, Ameeta;
- Blair, Ian;
- Capdevila, Jorge;
- Falck, John;
- Sligar, Stephen;
- Poulos, Thomas;
- Georg, Gunda;
- Ambrose, Elizabeth;
- Potter, David
The mechanisms by which cancer cell-intrinsic CYP monooxygenases promote tumor progression are largely unknown. CYP3A4 was unexpectedly associated with breast cancer mitochondria and synthesized arachidonic acid (AA)-derived epoxyeicosatrienoic acids (EETs), which promoted the electron transport chain/respiration and inhibited AMPKα. CYP3A4 knockdown activated AMPKα, promoted autophagy, and prevented mammary tumor formation. The diabetes drug metformin inhibited CYP3A4-mediated EET biosynthesis and depleted cancer cell-intrinsic EETs. Metformin bound to the active-site heme of CYP3A4 in a co-crystal structure, establishing CYP3A4 as a biguanide target. Structure-based design led to discovery of N1-hexyl-N5-benzyl-biguanide (HBB), which bound to the CYP3A4 heme with higher affinity than metformin. HBB potently and specifically inhibited CYP3A4 AA epoxygenase activity. HBB also inhibited growth of established ER+ mammary tumors and suppressed intratumoral mTOR. CYP3A4 AA epoxygenase inhibition by biguanides thus demonstrates convergence between eicosanoid activity in mitochondria and biguanide action in cancer, opening a new avenue for cancer drug discovery.