| Literature DB >> 29636068 |
Bin Zhao1,2, Xin Li1,2, Ye Wang1,2, Peng Shang3,4.
Abstract
This commentary highlights the findings by Mai, et al. that ironomycin, derivatives of salinomycin, exhibited more potent and selective therapeutic activity against breast cancer stem cells by accumulating and sequestering iron in lysosome, followed by an iron-mediated lysosomal production of reactive oxygen species and an iron-dependent cell death. These unprecedented findings identified iron homeostasis and iron-mediated processes as potentially druggable in the context of cancer stem cells.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer stem cells; Cell death; Executioner; Iron
Mesh:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29636068 PMCID: PMC5894200 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-018-0733-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Fig. 1Schematic model of iron-dependent cell death. Salinomycin or ironomycin was physically accumulated by lysosomes of CSCs, as a result of iron overload followed by an iron-catalysed lysosomal production of ROS and lipid hydroperoxides via Fenton reaction, subsequent driven DNA damage and cell death that known as ferroptosis. Fenton reaction describes the redox reaction of iron (Fe2+) with different peroxide species to generate hydroxyl (•OH) or alkoxyl (RO•) radicals. Ferric iron (Fe3+) can be recycled to Fe2+ by superoxide (•O2−) generating molecular oxygen (O2). The proposed mechanism was drawn by Bin Zhao and Xin Li based on Mai′ paper [8]