Cells (Apr 2020)

Involvement of 27-Hydroxycholesterol in Mitotane Action on Adrenocortical Carcinoma

  • Antonina Germano,
  • Daniela Rossin,
  • Valerio Leoni,
  • Noemi Iaia,
  • Laura Saba,
  • Vittoria Basile,
  • Soraya Puglisi,
  • Claudio Caccia,
  • Giuseppe Poli,
  • Fiorella Biasi,
  • Massimo Terzolo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells9040885
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 4
p. 885

Abstract

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Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare cancer with poor prognosis. Mitotane, the standard treatment for ACC, impairs adrenocortical steroid biosynthesis and cholesterol metabolism. In the H295R cell line, a standard ACC in vitro model, mitotane was previously reported to enhance the production of some oxysterols. To verify the possible mechanistic involvement of oxysterols in the anti-ACC effect of mitotane, a gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GC-MS) profiling of oxysterols and the main cholesterol precursors was carried out in H295R cells. Among the oxysterols detected in mitotane-treated cells, 27OHC was markedly produced, as well as lanosterol and lathosterol cholesterol precursors. In this cell model, mitotane was confirmed to affect mitochondrial transmembrane potential and induce apoptosis. Such cytotoxic effects were perfectly matched by H295R cell treatment with a single identical micromolar amount of 27OHC. The mitotane-dependent strong increase in 27OHC was confirmed in vivo, in the plasma of ACC patients under treatment with the drug. Moreover, lanosterol, lathosterol, desmosterol and, to a minor extent, 24-hydroxycholesterol and 25-hydroxycholesterol plasma levels were significantly increased in those patients. The cytotoxic effect of mitotane on ACC cells may be partly related to the increased intracellular level of 27OHC induced by the drug itself.

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