| Literature DB >> 27418953 |
Barbara Marengo1, Mariapaola Nitti1, Anna Lisa Furfaro2, Renata Colla1, Chiara De Ciucis1, Umberto Maria Marinari1, Maria Adelaide Pronzato1, Nicola Traverso1, Cinzia Domenicotti1.
Abstract
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) and their products are components of cell signaling pathways and play important roles in cellular physiology and pathophysiology. Under physiological conditions, cells control ROS levels by the use of scavenging systems such as superoxide dismutases, peroxiredoxins, and glutathione that balance ROS generation and elimination. Under oxidative stress conditions, excessive ROS can damage cellular proteins, lipids, and DNA, leading to cell damage that may contribute to carcinogenesis. Several studies have shown that cancer cells display an adaptive response to oxidative stress by increasing expression of antioxidant enzymes and molecules. As a double-edged sword, ROS influence signaling pathways determining beneficial or detrimental outcomes in cancer therapy. In this review, we address the role of redox homeostasis in cancer growth and therapy and examine the current literature regarding the redox regulatory systems that become upregulated in cancer and their role in promoting tumor progression and resistance to chemotherapy.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27418953 PMCID: PMC4932173 DOI: 10.1155/2016/6235641
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1Redox homeostasis is a balance of ROS generation and elimination. Mitochondria, NAPH oxidase (NOX), and endoplasmic reticulum are the three major intracellular sources of ROS. Anion superoxide (O2 ∙−) is the principal form of ROS and can be rapidly converted into hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) by superoxide dismutase (SOD). H2O2 can be catalyzed to hydroxyl radical (OH∙) in the presence of Fe2+ or Cu2+ ions or be converted to H2O by catalase. The amount of H2O2 is decisive for the cell fate: low and intermediate levels of the peroxide stimulate loss of cell homeostasis and increased adaptation to stress leading to neoplastic transformation while high levels induce cell death.
ROS modulating drugs undergoing clinical trials in oncology.
| Drug | Mechanism of action | Cancer type | Outcome | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| L-Buthionine-sulfoximine | Inhibits GSH synthesis; activates PKC | Neuroblastoma | Efficacious | [ |
| Menadione | Depletes GSH; activates ERK1/2 and p38MAPK | Gastrointestinal and lung cancer | Under clinical trial | [ |
| Imexon | Depletes intracellular thiols; increases AP-1 and Nrf2-DNA binding activity | Advanced breast cancer; NSCLC; prostate and pancreatic tumors | Efficacious | [ |
| Disulfiram | Oxidizes GSH and inhibits proteasome; activates JNK; inhibits Nrf2 and NF- | Metastatic melanoma; liver cancer | Under clinical trial | [ |
| Bortezomib | Inhibits proteasome activity; activates NF- | Myeloma, leukemia, AML, myelodysplastic syndrome, neuroblastoma, prostate cancer | Under clinical trial | [ |
| NOV-002 | Oxidizes GSH and induces S-glutathionylation | NSCLC; breast and ovarian cancer | Efficacious | [ |
| Ezatiostat | Inhibits GST-P1 and activates JNK/ERK | Myelodysplastic syndrome | Under clinical trial | [ |
| PX-12 | Inactivates Trx-1 | Advanced solid tumors | Efficacious | [ |
| Dimesna | Targets Trx and Grx | Ovarian carcinoma, NSCLC | Efficacious | [ |
| Motexafin gadolinium | Inhibits Trx | Pancreatic, biliary and haematological cancer, renal carcinoma | Under clinical trial | [ |
| Arsenic trioxide | Oxidizes GSH and thiol enzymes | APL, melanoma | Efficacious | [ |
Figure 2Redox-signaling pathways that are involved in cancer growth and progression. Cancer cells escape cell death and damage induced by high ROS levels by increasing their antioxidant defenses such as GSH that contribute to lower the amount of ROS. ROS are produced by NOX in the plasma membrane and by mitochondria, and at low levels they act as second messengers by activating many protein kinases (PI3/Akt, p38 MAPK, and ATM) and transcription factors (Nrf2, NF-κB, p53, and HIF-1) able to contribute to cancer cell survival by stimulating cell proliferation, inflammation, and angiogenesis. GR, glutathione reductase.
Modulators of redox signaling pathways employed in combination with anticancer agents and their effects.
| Drug | Mechanism of action | Cancer type | Outcome | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trametinib | MEK inhibitor | Melanoma | Efficacious | [ |
| Selumetinib | MEK inhibitor | Thyroid, ovarian cancer | Efficacious | [ |
| Tamoxifen | PKC inhibitor | Gliomas, breast cancer | Efficacious | [ |
| Perifosine | Akt, MAPK and JNK inhibitor | Haematologic tumors, myeloma | Efficacious | [ |
| Sulfasalazine | NF- | Colorectal cancer | Efficacious | [ |
| Nelvinavir | Decreases HIF-1 | Adenoid cystic carcinoma, pancreatic cancer, NSCLC | Efficacious | [ |
| Topotecan | HIF-1 and Topoisomerase I inhibitor | Endometrial and cervical cancer | Efficacious | [ |
| Aprinocarsen | Antisense oligonucleotide against PKC- | Lymphoma, breast cancer | Contrasting results | [ |
| Midostaurin | Multitarget inhibitor of PKCs, VEGFR2, PDGFR | AML, melanoma | Contrasting results | [ |
| MK-2206 | Akt and PI3K inhibitor | Gastric, pancreatic and breast cancer | Under clinical trial | [ |
| Serdemetan | mdm2 inhibitor | Refractory solid tumors | Under clinical trial | [ |
| PRIMA-1 and PRIMA-1MET | Reverse the oncogenic properties of mutant p53 | Ovarian cancer | Under clinical trial | [ |
| AMG 232 | mdm2-p53 interactions inhibitor | Melanoma, myeloma, myeloid leukemia | Under clinical trial | [ |