| Literature DB >> 27190573 |
Olga Tsave1, Savvas Petanidis1, Efrosini Kioseoglou1, Maria P Yavropoulou2, John G Yovos2, Doxakis Anestakis3, Androniki Tsepa4, Athanasios Salifoglou1.
Abstract
Over the last decade, a diverse spectrum of vanadium compounds has arisen as anti-inflammatory therapeutic metallodrugs targeting various diseases. Recent studies have demonstrated that select well-defined vanadium species are involved in many immune-driven molecular mechanisms that regulate and influence immune responses. In addition, advances in cell immunotherapy have relied on the use of metallodrugs to create a "safe," highly regulated, environment for optimal control of immune response. Emerging findings include optimal regulation of B/T cell signaling and expression of immune suppressive or anti-inflammatory cytokines, critical for immune cell effector functions. Furthermore, in-depth perusals have explored NF-κB and Toll-like receptor signaling mechanisms in order to enhance adaptive immune responses and promote recruitment or conversion of inflammatory cells to immunodeficient tissues. Consequently, well-defined vanadium metallodrugs, poised to access and resensitize the immune microenvironment, interact with various biomolecular targets, such as B cells, T cells, interleukin markers, and transcription factors, thereby influencing and affecting immune signaling. A synthetically formulated and structure-based (bio)chemical reactivity account of vanadoforms emerges as a plausible strategy for designing drugs characterized by selectivity and specificity, with respect to the cellular molecular targets intimately linked to immune responses, thereby giving rise to a challenging field linked to the development of immune system vanadodrugs.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27190573 PMCID: PMC4844775 DOI: 10.1155/2016/4013639
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1Vanadium forms exhibiting immunogenic activity.
Figure 2Vanadium influences several immune-related pathways, thereby sculpturing immune response.
Vanadium oxidation state (V(V, IV, III)) and form-specific effects in immune system processes (A in vitro, B in vivo).
| Vanadium species, compound | Immune system process, pathology, disease | Vanadium effect | Vanadium dose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sodium metavanadate (V(V)) | Immune system activation against | (1) Amplification of production of IFN-c and total IgG in irradiated splenocytes | 0–3.99 |
| NF- | Activation of both NF- | 0–80 | |
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| Ammonium metavanadate (V(V)) | T cell signaling | (1) Concentration-dependent inhibition-proliferation of splenic T cells | 5–60 ppm19,B |
| (2) Immune system function of local intestinal mucosa in broilers could be affected | 5–60 mg/kg20,B | ||
| Cellular immune function | Reduction of percentage of peripheral blood T-cell subsets and proliferation function and serum interleukin-2 content | 5–60 ppm26,B | |
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| Vanadium pentoxide (V(V)) | T lymphocyte activation | (1) Inhibition of secretion of proinflammatory cytokines (IL-1, TNF- | 1 fM–100 |
| Ammonium metavanadate (V(V)) | Immunocompetence | (2) Effect of production-release of major immunoregulatory cytokines and disruption of cell-mediated immunity | |
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| Vanadium pentoxide (V(V)) | Autoimmunity | (1) Thymic dysfunction | 0.02 M21,B |
| Impairment of function of immunoregulatory NK cells | IL-2-mediated dysregulation of signaling pathways in NK cells | 25–400 | |
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| Sodium orthovanadate (V(V)) | B cell signaling | Enhancement of DNA synthesis by T and B cell mitogenic agents | 0–1000 |
| T cell signaling | (1) Enhancement of inducible forms of CREB | 10–100 | |
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| “Pervanadate” (V(V)-peroxido species) | NF- | NF- | 50–250 |
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| Bis(peroxido)vanadium species (Bpv) (V(V)) | NF- | (1) NF- | 10 |
| (2) Neuroprotection | 0.2 mg/kg/day41,B | ||
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| Vanadyl sulphate (V(IV)) | B cell morphology | (1) B cell morphology maintenance | 0.25, 0.50, 0.75, 1.00 mg/mL17,B |
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| Vanadium(IV) oxido complex | NF- | Modulation of both ERK and NF- | 7–25 |
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| Vanadium(III)-(L-cysteine) (V(III)) | Antioxidant defense, inflammation | (1) Prevention of cisplatin generation of ROS | 1–10 |
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| Ti-Al-V alloy surfaces | TLR signaling | (1) Reduction of TLR4 mRNA | N/A35,Α |
Figure 3Key role(s) of vanadium in promoting innate and adaptive immunity.
Figure 4Current obstacles to overcome by specifically designed vanadium metallodrugs in cancer immunotherapeutics.