| Literature DB >> 25221514 |
Abstract
Iron is the most abundant metal in the human body and mainly works as a cofactor for proteins such as hemoglobin and various enzymes. No independent life forms on earth can survive without iron. However, excess iron is intimately associated with carcinogenesis by increasing oxidative stress via its catalytic activity to generate hydroxyl radicals. Biomolecules with redox-active sulfhydryl function(s) (thiol compounds) are necessary for the maintenance of mildly reductive cellular environments to counteract oxidative stress, and for the execution of redox reactions for metabolism and detoxification. Involvement of glutathione S-transferase and thioredoxin has long attracted the attention of cancer researchers. Here, I update recent findings on the involvement of iron and thiol compounds during carcinogenesis and in cancer cells. It is now recognized that the cystine/glutamate transporter (antiporter) is intimately associated with ferroptosis, an iron-dependent, non-apoptotic form of cell death, observed in cancer cells, and also with cancer stem cells; the former with transporter blockage but the latter with its stabilization. Excess iron in the presence of oxygen appears the most common known mutagen. Ironically, the persistent activation of antioxidant systems via genetic alterations in Nrf2 and Keap1 also contributes to carcinogenesis. Therefore, it is difficult to conclude the role of iron and thiol compounds as friends or foes, which depends on the quantity/distribution and induction/flexibility, respectively. Avoiding further mutation would be the most helpful strategy for cancer prevention, and myriad of efforts are being made to sort out the weaknesses of cancer cells.Entities:
Keywords: Nrf2; cancer stem cell; carcinogenesis; ferroptosis; glutathione; iron; oxidative stress; peroxiredoxins
Year: 2014 PMID: 25221514 PMCID: PMC4147246 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2014.00200
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 1Differences between atherosclerosis and carcinogenesis as oxidative stress-induced diseases.
Figure 2Molecular carcinogenic processes in terms of oxidative stress.
Figure 3Oxygen as a medium for electron flow and the associated role of catalytic ferrous iron (Fe[II]) toward Fenton reaction. Note that only a small fraction generates hydroxyl radicals (·OH). Refer to text and Figure 7.
Models of iron-induced carcinogenesis using wild-type animals.
| Iron oxide | Inhalation | Mouse | Lung adenocarcinoma, fibrosarcoma | Campbell, |
| Iron dextran complex | Intramuscular | Rat | Spindle cell sarcoma | Richmond, |
| Ferric nitrilotriacetate | Intraperitoneal | Rat | Renal cell carcinoma | Ebina et al., |
| Ferric nitrilotriacetate | Intraperitoneal | Mouse | Renal cell carcinoma | Li et al., |
| Ferric saccharate | Intraperitoneal | Rat | Malignant mesothelioma | Okada et al., |
| Ferric ethylene-diamine- N,N′-diacetate | Intraperitoneal | Rat | Renal cell carcinoma | Liu and Okada, |
The models shown above demonstrate the carcinogenicity of iron compounds in rodents.
Figure 4Macroscopic appearance of ferric nitrilotriacetate (Fe-NTA)-induced renal cell carcinoma (interrupted circle; tumor diameter is more than 40 mm). K, normal kidney of the opposite side; L, liver; T, testis.
Figure 5Molecular mechanism of ferric nitrilotriacetate (Fe-NTA)-induced oxidative damage of renal proximal tubules after a single intraperitoneal injection. This depends on two distinct characteristics of renal proximal tubular lumina: paucity of antioxidattive proteins such as albumin and reductive environment through the presence of L-cysteine with GSH cycles.
Human carcinogenesis associated with iron overload.
| Genetic hemochromatosis | Liver | Hereditary disorder (types 1–5); excessive iron absorption | Hepatocellular carcinoma, gastric cancer, etc. | Fracanzani et al., | |
| Viral hepatitis B and C | Liver | Autoimmunity-induced hepatocyte damage and iron accumulation | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Bonkovsky et al., | |
| Endometriosis | Ovary | Monthly menstrual hemorrhage in ectopic endometrial tissue | Clear cell carcinoma, endometrioid adenocarcinoma | Amp of | Pearce et al., |
| Asbestos exposure | Mesothelium, lung | Content and adsorption of asbestos fiber; chronic inflammation by foreign body | Malignant mesothelioma; lung cancer | HD of | Jiang et al., |
Amp, amplification; HD, homozygous deletion.
Figure 6Consequences of Fenton reaction in the genome DNA during carcinogenesis. HNE, 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal.
Figure 7Antagonizing role of iron and thiol compounds. Numerous overlapping mechanisms using thiol compounds exist to decompose hydrogen peroxide to water in order to bypass the generation of hydroxyl radicals. Hydrogen peroxide is now recognized as a signaling molecule whose main regulator is the peroxiredoxin/sulfiredoxin systems, which are at least partially under the control of the Nrf2/Keap1 system. Some cancers hijack Nrf2/Keap1 system with mutation in these genes, which persistently activate antioxidant systems in the cancer cells. Refer to text and Figure 8 for details.
Figure 8Regulation of Nrf2 transcription machinery through oxidative stress sensor, Keap1, with numerous redox-reactive cysteine residues.
Figure 9Key role of the cystine/glutamate antiporter in cancer cells. (A) Overexpression of CD44v(8-11) stabilizes the cystine/glutamate antiporter to increase cysteine and glutathione (GSH) in cancer stem cells. (B) Conversely, erastin blocks the cystine/glutamate antiporter, lowers cysteine and finally induces iron-dependent cancer cell death (ferroptosis), which can be blocked with deferoxamine (DFO).
Antagonizing roles of iron and thiols.
| Transition | Fe(II), transport across membrane, cytosol/Fe(III), extracellular) | -SH(reduced)/-SS-(oxidized) |
| Reaction | Catalytic Fe(II): Fenton reaction in the presence of hydrogen peroxide; oxidative damage by hydroxyl radicals, irreversible but usually limited with various preventive mechanisms | Common; non-destructive; redox regulation; usually reversible with reducing enzymes (Figure |
| Biological significance | Cofactor of proteins (heme)/enzymes (catalytic site); stored as ferritin; oxygen transport and storage | Formation of mildly reductive intracellular environments; mostly present as cysteine residue in peptides (GSH) or proteins (thioredoxin, metallothionein, etc.); cystine when oxidized; redox signal |
| Metabolism | Slow; essential nutrient; nearly closed system (whole 4 g in adults; 1 mg in and out daily); no excretion pathway except bleeding (hemoglobin); transported by transferrin and its receptor system | Fast; cysteine is synthesized from methionine (essential amino acid) |
| Regulation | Iron transporters; HFE, hepcidin, IRP-1 and -2 (posttranscriptional) (Hentze and Kuhn, | Transcription factors: Nrf2/Keap1, AP-1, NF-κB (Schenk et al., |
| Deficiency/excess/toxicity | Deficiency causes anemia; excess leads to oxidative tissue damage and sometimes carcinogenesis | Toxicity known for certain thiol compounds to initiate Fenton-like reaction (Munday, |
| Molecular affinity | O2, CO, NO; transferrin, siderophore (Devireddy et al., | Electrophiles (Dennehy et al., |