| Literature DB >> 29805775 |
Gloria M Calaf1,2, Ulises Urzua3, Lara Termini4, Francisco Aguayo3,5.
Abstract
Breast, cervical and ovarian cancers are highly prevalent in women worldwide. Environmental, hormonal and viral-related factors are especially relevant in the development of these tumors. These factors are strongly related to oxidative stress (OS) through the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). The OS is caused by an imbalance in the redox status of the organism and is literally defined as "an imbalance between ROS generation and its detoxification by biological system leading to impairment of damage repair by cell/tissue". The multistep progression of cancer suggests that OS is involved in cancer initiation, promotion and progression. In this review, we described the role of OS and the interplay with environmental, host and viral factors related to breast, cervical and ovarian cancers initiation, promotion and progression. In addition, the role of the natural antioxidant compound curcumin and other compounds for breast, cervical and ovarian cancers prevention/treatment is discussed.Entities:
Keywords: breast; cervical; curcumin; ovarian cancer; oxidative stress
Year: 2018 PMID: 29805775 PMCID: PMC5955122 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.25323
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Systematic literature analysis of genes associated to oxidative stress in female cancers
PubMed was used via the text-mining tool SciMiner (http://hurlab.med.und.edu/SciMiner/, accessed August 1st, 2017) with the keywords “breast cancer” and “ROS”, “cervical cancer” and “ROS”, and “ovarian cancer” and “ROS” in separate queries. Using the default settings of SciMiner, the output resulted in 984, 213 and 289 breast cancer (BC), cervical cancer (CC) and ovarian cancer (OC)-associated genes, respectively. The Venn diagram was obtained with VENNY 2.1 (Oliveros JC, 2007–2015. Venny. An interactive tool for comparing lists with Venn's diagrams. http://bioinfogp.cnb.csic.es/tools/venny/index.html). The resultant list of 113 genes overlapping the 3 queries was subjected to the gene ontology (GO) analysis described in Table 1.
Gene ontology profile of genes related to oxidative stress in female cancers*
| Go term | Number of genes | Q |
|---|---|---|
| Regulation of cell death | 72 | 1.75E–43 |
| Nuclear part | 66 | 3.16E–14 |
| Regulation of transcription, DNA-templated | 57 | 3.10E–11 |
| Cell surface receptor signaling pathway | 50 | 3.09E–15 |
| Regulation of phosphorylation | 50 | 7.98E–23 |
| Response to oxidative stress | 42 | 7.16E–39 |
| Regulation of cell cycle | 41 | 7.73E–20 |
| Mitochondrion | 40 | 8.11E–13 |
| Response to DNA damage stimulus | 32 | 7.24E–17 |
| Response to metal ion | 32 | 3.88E–27 |
| Regulation of kinase activity | 30 | 1.24E–13 |
| Response to hormone | 28 | 7.88E–13 |
| Regulation of MAPK cascade | 28 | 5.61E–14 |
| Response to hypoxia | 22 | 4.30E–15 |
| Chromatin organization | 13 | 1.26E–03 |
| DNA repair | 10 | 4.15E–03 |
| Cellular oxidant detoxification | 10 | 1.45E–09 |
| Antioxidant activity | 10 | 3.36E–09 |
*The list of 113 coincident genes implicated in BC, CC and OC (see Figure 1) were analysed with the GO tool VLAD. Note that some degree of gene overlap might occur among the indicated GO terms. “Q” indicates the false discovery rate, i.e. the multiple test adjusted significance value.