Azithromycin enhances the cytotoxicity of DNA‐damaging drugs via lysosomal membrane permeabilization in lung cancer cells

0301 basic medicine Cell Membrane Permeability Lung Neoplasms Cell Survival Drug Synergism Original Articles Azithromycin Carboplatin 3. Good health 03 medical and health sciences A549 Cells Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung Cell Line, Tumor Autophagy Humans Topoisomerase II Inhibitors Lysosomes Cell Proliferation DNA Damage
DOI: 10.1111/cas.14992 Publication Date: 2021-06-03T20:58:44Z
ABSTRACT
AbstractCancer cells use autophagy for growth, survival, and cytoprotection from chemotherapy. Therefore, autophagy inhibitors appear to be good candidates for cancer treatment. Our group previously reported that macrolide antibiotics, especially azithromycin (AZM), have potent autophagy inhibitory effects, and combination treatment with tyrosine kinase inhibitors or proteasome inhibitors enhances their anti–cancer activity. In this study, we evaluated the effect of combination therapy with DNA‐damaging drugs and AZM in non–small‐cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cells. We found that the cytotoxic activities of DNA‐damaging drugs, such as doxorubicin (DOX), etoposide, and carboplatin, were enhanced in the presence of AZM in NSCLC cell lines, whereas AZM alone exhibited almost no cytotoxicity. This enhanced cell death was dependent on wild‐type‐p53 status and autophagosome‐forming ability because TP53 knockout (KO) and ATG5‐KO cells attenuated AZM‐enhanced cytotoxicity. DOX treatment upregulated lysosomal biogenesis by activating TFEB and led to lysosomal membrane damage as assessed by galectin 3 puncta assay and cytoplasmic leakage of lysosomal enzymes. In contrast, AZM treatment blocked autophagy, which resulted in the accumulation of lysosomes/autolysosomes. Thus, the effects of DOX and AZM were integrated into the marked increase in damaged lysosomes/autolysosomes, leading to prominent lysosomal membrane permeabilization (LMP) for apoptosis induction. Our data suggest that concomitant treatment with DNA‐damaging drugs and AZM is a promising strategy for NSCLC treatment via pronounced LMP induction.
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