Literature DB >> 20739263

[Biological significance of naturally occurring deuterium: the antitumor effect of deuterium depletion].

Gábor Somlyai1, Miklós Molnár, Gábor Laskay, Mariann Szabó, Tamás Berkényi, Imre Guller, András Kovács.   

Abstract

The concentration of deuterium is about 150 ppm (over 16 mmol/L) in surface water and more than 10 mmol/L in living organisms. Experiments with deuterium depleted water (30+/-5 ppm) revealed that due to D-depletion various tumorous cell lines (PC-3, human prostate, MDA, human breast, HT-29, human colon, M14, human melanoma) required longer time to multiply in vitro. DDW caused tumor regression in xenotransplanted mice (MDA and MCF-7, human breast, PC-3) and induced apoptosis in vitro and in vivo. Deuterium depleted water (25+/-5 ppm) induced complete or partial tumor regression in dogs and cats with spontaneous malignancies, it was registered as anticancer for veterinary use in 1999 (Vetera-DDW-25 A.U.V., 13/99 FVM). The hypodermic preparation of the registered veterinary drug was successfully tested in clinical investigations. Under the permission of the Hungarian Institute of Pharmacology (No. 5621/40/95) a randomized, double blind controlled, human Phase II clinical trial with prostate cancer was performed, in compliance with GCP principles, which exhibited a significant difference between the control and treated groups with respect to the examined parameters, median survival time and the extension of life-span. We suggest that cells are able to regulate the D/H ratio and the changes in the D/H ratio can trigger certain molecular mechanisms having a key role in cell cycle regulation. We suppose that not the shift in the intracellular pH, but the concomitant increase in the D/H ratio is the real trigger for the cells to enter into S phase. The decrease of D concentration can intervene in the signal transduction pathways thus leading to tumor regression. Deuterium depletion may open new perspectives in cancer treatment and prevention helping to increase the effectiveness of current oncotherapies.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20739263     DOI: 10.1556/OH.2010.28865

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Orv Hetil        ISSN: 0030-6002            Impact factor:   0.540


  5 in total

1.  Anti-aging effects of deuterium depletion on Mn-induced toxicity in a C. elegans model.

Authors:  Daiana Silva Avila; Gábor Somlyai; Ildikó Somlyai; Michael Aschner
Journal:  Toxicol Lett       Date:  2012-04-26       Impact factor: 4.372

2.  Anti-inflammatory Effects of Deuterium-Depleted Water Plus Rosa Damascena Mill. Essential Oil Via Cyclooxygenase-2 Pathway in Rats.

Authors:  Faezeh Fatemi; Abbas Golbodagh; Reza Hojihosseini; Abolfazl Dadkhah; Kambiz Akbarzadeh; Salome Dini; Mohammad Reza Mohammadi Malayeri
Journal:  Turk J Pharm Sci       Date:  2020-02-19

3.  Deuterium depleted water effects on survival of lung cancer patients and expression of Kras, Bcl2, and Myc genes in mouse lung.

Authors:  Zoltán Gyöngyi; Ferenc Budán; István Szabó; István Ember; István Kiss; Krisztina Krempels; Ildikó Somlyai; Gábor Somlyai
Journal:  Nutr Cancer       Date:  2013       Impact factor: 2.900

4.  Heavy Water Affects Vital Parameters of Human Melanoma Cells in vitro.

Authors:  Johannes Kleemann; Gabi Reichenbach; Nadja Zöller; Manuel Jäger; Roland Kaufmann; Markus Meissner; Stefan Kippenberger
Journal:  Cancer Manag Res       Date:  2020-02-17       Impact factor: 3.989

5.  Slight Deuterium Enrichment in Water Acts as an Antioxidant: Is Deuterium a Cell Growth Regulator?

Authors:  Xuepei Zhang; Jin Wang; Roman A Zubarev
Journal:  Mol Cell Proteomics       Date:  2020-08-07       Impact factor: 5.911

  5 in total

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