| Literature DB >> 26056460 |
Panagiota Papanagnou1, Panagiotis Baltopoulos2, Maria Tsironi1.
Abstract
Experimental data indicate that several pharmacological agents that have long been used for the management of various diseases unrelated to cancer exhibit profound in vitro and in vivo anticancer activity. This is of major clinical importance, since it would possibly aid in reassessing the therapeutic use of currently used agents for which clinicians already have experience. Further, this would obviate the time-consuming process required for the development and the approval of novel antineoplastic drugs. Herein, both pre-clinical and clinical data concerning the antineoplastic function of distinct commercially available pharmacological agents that are not currently used in the field of oncology, ie, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, antihypertensive agents, and anti-human immunodeficiency virus agents inhibiting viral protease, are reviewed. The aim is to provide integrated information regarding not only the molecular basis of the antitumor function of these agents but also the applicability of the reevaluation of their therapeutic range in the clinical setting.Entities:
Keywords: exploitation; pleiotropy; repositioning; tumorigenesis
Year: 2015 PMID: 26056460 PMCID: PMC4445694 DOI: 10.2147/TCRM.S82049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Clin Risk Manag ISSN: 1176-6336 Impact factor: 2.423
Figure 1Nelfinavir-regulated signaling pathways which affect tumor cell biology or determine the effectiveness of antitumor therapy.
Notes: (A) The human immunodeficiency virus protease inhibitor nelfinavir triggers both apoptotic and non-apoptotic cell-death in cancer cells. Still, nelfinavir also acts as an Akt inhibitor and induces an autophagic response that counteracts either mode of cell death. (B) Under normoxic and hypoxic conditions nelfinavir suppresses Sp1- and HIF-1α-mediated upregulation of VEGF, respectively. Both of these pathways are possibly blunted due to a nelfinavir-induced inhibition of Akt, which in turn positively controls Sp1 and HIF-1α. Nelfinavir also increases tumor oxygenation. The latter possibly accounts for the radiosensitizing effects of this drug. (C) In prostate cancer cells, the antiproliferative effects of nelfinavir are mechanistically associated with inhibition of the IL-6/STAT3 axis (either at the level of STAT3 phosphorylation triggered by IL-6 or at the level of STAT3 binding at deoxyribonucleic acid [DNA] in the form of a dimer) and inhibition of the Akt pathway. Both of these molecular events eventually result in perturbed AR-mediated signaling, due to the fact that STAT3 and Akt serve as transcriptional coactivators for AR (shown as a blue dimer bound to DNA). Upward-pointing arrows symbolize upregulation, whereas downward-pointing arrows symbolize downregulation. The red “X” denotes perturbed pathway or process.
Abbreviations: IL, interleukin; STAT, Signal transducer and activator of transcription; AR, androgen receptor; SP, specificity protein; ARE, androgen response element; HIF, hypoxia-inducible factor; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor.