| Literature DB >> 31583051 |
Qiaohong Qian1, Wanqing Chen2, Yajuan Cao2, Qi Cao1, Yajing Cui2, Yan Li2, Jianchun Wu2.
Abstract
Recently, reactive oxygen species (ROS), a class of highly bioactive molecules, have been extensively studied in cancers. Cancer cells typically exhibit higher levels of basal ROS than normal cells, primarily due to their increased metabolism, oncogene activation, and mitochondrial dysfunction. This moderate increase in ROS levels facilitates cancer initiation, development, and progression; however, excessive ROS concentrations can lead to various types of cell death. Therefore, therapeutic strategies that either increase intracellular ROS to toxic levels or, conversely, decrease the levels of ROS may be effective in treating cancers via ROS regulation. Chinese herbal medicine (CHM) is a major type of natural medicine and has greatly contributed to human health. CHMs have been increasingly used for adjuvant clinical treatment of tumors. Although their mechanism of action is unclear, CHMs can execute a variety of anticancer effects by regulating intracellular ROS. In this review, we summarize the dual roles of ROS in cancers, present a comprehensive analysis of and update the role of CHM-especially its active compounds and ingredients-in the prevention and treatment of cancers via ROS regulation and emphasize precautions and strategies for the use of CHM in future research and clinical trials.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31583051 PMCID: PMC6754955 DOI: 10.1155/2019/9240426
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1Production, regulation, and biological effects of ROS. Mitochondria and NOXs are the main sources of O2·-. O2·- is formed by molecular oxygen that receives one single electron leaking from mitochondrial ETC or from NOXs. O2·- is then rapidly converted into H2O2 by the corresponding SODs. H2O2 can be converted into H2O through intracellular antioxidants such as PRX, GPX, and CAT. When the H2O2 level is uncontrollably increased, OH· is further formed via the Fenton reaction with metal ions, thereby damaging biological macromolecules such as DNA, lipids, and proteins. In addition, H2O2 is a major signaling molecule participating in cellular physiological and pathological processes. The effects of ROS depend on their intracellular concentration. Normal cells typically have lower concentrations of ROS due to their normal metabolism; in normal cells, ROS act as signaling molecules to maintain homeostasis, such as by limiting cellular proliferation, differentiation, and survival. The increased metabolic activity of cancer cells produces high concentrations of ROS, leading to a series of tumor-promoting events, such as DNA damage, genomic instability, oncogene activation, sustained proliferation, and survival. Elevated ROS concentrations also result in the protective growth of cancer cells with enhanced antioxidant capacity to maintain tumor-promoting signaling. Increasing ROS levels to the toxicity threshold, such as by treatment with exogenous ROS inducers or antioxidant inhibitors, causes oxidative damage to cells and, inevitably, cell death.
Components of TCMs targeted to decrease ROS levels and the effects of these components in cells.
| Components | Herbs | Target cells | Biological effects | Molecular events | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Astragaloside IV |
| Kidney proximal tubular HK-2 cells | Mitigate cisplatin-induced acute kidney injury | T-SOD⬆, GSH-Px⬆, CAT⬆; KIM-1⬇, MDA⬇, TNF- | [ |
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| Benzyl isothiocyanate |
| Leukemia HL-60 cells | Prevent inflammation-related carcinogenesis | NADPH oxidase⬇, ROS⬇ | [ |
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| Catalpol |
| Pheochromocytoma PC-12 cells | Against LPS-induced apoptosis | Bcl-2⬆, BAX⬇, p-CaMK⬇, Ca2+⬇; CaMKII-dependent ASK-1/JNK/p38 pathway⬇ | [ |
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| Crocin |
| Melanoma B16F10 cells | Inhibition of melanogenesis | Tyrosinase⬇, MITF⬇, ROS⬇ | [ |
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| Curcumin |
| Breast epithelial MCF-10A cells | Against PhIP-induced cytotoxicity | Nrf2⬆, FOXO⬆; BRCA-1, H2AFX, PARP-1, and P16⬆; Casp-3/9⬇ | [ |
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| Dioscin |
| Ventricular H9c2 cells | Against doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity | miR-140-5p⬇; ROS, MDA, SOD, GSH, and GSH-Px⬇; Nrf2 and Sirt2 pathway⬆ | [ |
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| Daphnetin |
| Monocyte RAW264.7 cells | Against t-BHP-triggered oxidative damage and mitochondrial dysfunction | ROS⬇, MDA⬇; SOD⬆, GSH/GSSG⬆; JNK and ER⬆; Nrf2/ARE pathway⬆ | [ |
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| Ellagic acid |
| Ishikawa cells | Reduction of glycolytic flux | ROS⬇, NHE1⬇, Na+/H+ exchanger activity⬇, PHi⬇; | [ |
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| Eriodictyol |
| Pheochromocytoma PC-12 cells | Against hydrogen peroxide-induced neurotoxicity | Nrf2, HO-1, | [ |
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| Epigallocatechin-3-gallate |
| Inner ear UB/OC-1 cells | Against cisplatin-induced ototoxicity | ROS⬇, ERK1/2⬇, STAT3/STAT1⬆ | [ |
| Breast epithelial MCF-10A cells | Against PhIP-induced breast carcinogenesis | Ras/ERK/Nox/ROS pathway⬇ | [ | ||
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| Isoliquiritigenin |
| Kidney epithelial LLC-PK1 cells | Against cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity | ROS⬇, Casp-3⬇, Nrf2/HO-1⬆ | [ |
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| Luteolin |
| Bronchial epithelial BEAS-2B cells | Inhibition of Cr(VI)-induced carcinogenesis | AP-1, HIF-1 | [ |
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| Nexrutine |
| Pancreatic cancer cells | Inhibit autophagy and pancreatic cancer cell growth | ROS⬇, LC3-II⬇; STAT3⬇ | [ |
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| Pedicularioside G |
| Hepatoma SMMC-7721 cells and HUVEC | Inhibition of angiogenesis and tumorigenesis | ROS⬇, VEGF⬇, IL-8⬇ | [ |
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| Resveratrol |
| Pancreatic stellate cells | Inhibition of invasion, migration, and glycolysis | ROS/miR-21⬇, PTEN⬆ | [ |
| Glioblastoma U87 MG and GBM8401 cells | Enhance the efficacy of temozolomide | ROS/ERK-mediated autophagy⬇; apoptosis⬆ | [ | ||
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| Rutin |
| Neuroblastoma IMR32 cells | Ameliorates doxorubicin-induced memory deficits | ROS/JNK/TNF/P38 MAPK pathway⬇ | [ |
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| Saikosaponin-D |
| / | Reduces cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity | ROS, P38, and JNK/NF- | [ |
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| Sulforaphane |
| Bronchial epithelial BEAS-2B cells | Against cadmium-induced carcinogenesis | Nrf2⬆, ROS⬇, protective autophagy⬆ | [ |
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| Tetramethylpyrazine |
| Kidney proximal tubular HK-2 cells | Against arsenite-induced nephrotoxicity | ROS⬇, GSH⬆, apoptosis⬇, proinflammatory signals⬇, cytotoxic autophagy⬇ | [ |
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| Tanshinone II-A |
| Monocyte RAW264.7 cells and stomach cancer MKN45 cells | Decrease | NF- | [ |
Compounds of TCMs targeted to increase ROS levels and the effects of these components in cancer cells.
| Components | Herbs | Target cells | Biological effects | Molecular events | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aloe emodin |
| Lung cancer cells | DNA damage | ROS⬆, SOD⬆; hMTH1, hOGG1, and APE⬇ | [ |
| Nasopharyngeal cancer cells | Cycle arrest | Cyclin B1⬆, Cdc2⬆, PARP⬆, Casp-3/8⬆ | [ | ||
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| Atractyloside |
| Leukemia cells | Apoptosis | ROS⬆; ER Ca2+⬆ | [ |
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| Baicalein |
| Breast cancer cells | Apoptosis | PLC-dependent Ca2+⬆, ROS⬆; Ca2+-associated apoptosis⬆ | [ |
| Colon/prostate cancer cells | Apoptosis/overcome TRAIL resistance | ROS⬆, DR5⬆, TRAIL receptor⬆ | [ | ||
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| Berberine |
| Lung cancer cells | Apoptosis | SREBP1⬇; mitochondrial dysfunction, ROS⬆, p-AMPK⬆; lipogenesis⬇ | [ |
| Liver cancer cells | Apoptosis | p-PTEN, p-Akt, p-mTOR, and p-PDK1⬇; FoxO1, FoxO3, Bim, Bax, Bax/Bcl-2, Casp-3/9, and cl-PARP⬆; p-JNK⬆, ROS⬆; SOD, CAT, and GSH⬇ | [ | ||
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| Bufalin |
| Breast cancer cells | Necroptosis | RIP1/RIP3⬆; ROS and PARP-1⬆, RIP1/RIP3/PARP-1 pathway⬆ | [ |
| Colon cancer cells | Autophagy | ROS⬆, p-JNK⬆; ATG5, Beclin-1, LC3-II, and autophagic flux⬆ | [ | ||
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| Celastrol |
| Osteosarcoma cells | Apoptosis | ROS/JNK pathway⬆, Casp-3/8/9⬆; LC3-II⬆ | [ |
| Breast cancer cells | Against doxorubicin resistance | HSF-1⬆, NF- | [ | ||
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| Cordycepin |
| Glioma cells | Apoptosis | ROS⬆, GSH⬇; p-GSK-3 | [ |
| Gastric/colon cancer cells | DNA damage | DR3⬆, A3AR⬇, PI3K/Akt⬆, ROS⬆, | [ | ||
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| Costunolide |
| Prostate cancer cells | Enhance doxorubicin-induced apoptosis | ROS⬆, p-JNK⬆, p-p38⬆, | [ |
| Ovarian cancer cells | Induce apoptosis of platinum-resistant cells | ROS⬆, Bcl-2⬇, Casp-3/8/9⬆ | [ | ||
| Colon cancer cells | TrxR1⬇, ROS⬆, ERS⬆ | [ | |||
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| Cucurbitacin E |
| Colorectal cancer primary cell lines | Cycle arrest | ROS⬆, | [ |
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| Curcumin |
| Lung/prostate cancer cells | Apoptosis | TrxR2⬇; Bax/Bcl-2⬆, | [ |
| Cervical cancer cells | p-PERK, IRE-1 | [ | |||
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| Daidzein |
| Breast cancer cells | Apoptosis | ROS⬆, | [ |
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| Emodin |
| Cervical cancer cells | Apoptosis | ROS⬆, NF- | [ |
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| Epigallocatechin-3-gallate |
| Malignant B-cell lines | Apoptosis | Cyto C, Smac/DIABLO, AIF, and Casp-3/9⬆ | [ |
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| Escin |
| Osteosarcoma cells | Autophagy | ROS/p38 MAPK⬆; LC3 II, ATG5 | [ |
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| Eugenol |
| Leukemia cells | Apoptosis | ROS⬆, | [ |
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| Evodiamine |
| Glioma cells | Apoptosis | Calcium/JNK signaling-mediated autophagy⬆; calcium/mitochondria-mediated apoptosis⬆ | [ |
| Cervical cancer cells | PTK/Ras-Raf-JNK⬆; ROS/NO⬆; p53, p21, Cdc2, and cyclin B1⬆ | [ | |||
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| Gambogic acid |
| Colon cancer cells | Apoptosis/against drug resistance |
| [ |
| Lung cancer cells | Synergistic with cisplatin | Casp-3/8/9, Fas and Bax⬆; Bcl-2,XIAP, survivin⬇; NF- | [ | ||
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| Germacrone |
| Breast cancer cells | Apoptosis | ROS⬆, | [ |
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| Gypenoside |
| Esophageal cancer cells | Autophagy | ROS-induced ERS⬆, Ca2+⬆; P62⬆, autophagic flux⬇ | [ |
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| Honokiol |
| Osteosarcoma/glioma cells | Apoptosis | GRP-78⬆, ROS⬆, p-ERK1/2⬆; LC3 II⬆ | [ |
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| Icariin |
| Esophageal cancer cells | Apoptosis | GSH⬇; NADPH, Casp-9⬆; p-PERK, GRP-78, ATF4, p-eIF2 | [ |
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| Isoalantolactone |
| Esophageal cancer cells | Apoptosis | ROS⬆, DR5⬆, Casp-3/7/10⬆; DR5-induced extrinsic apoptosis | [ |
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| Luteolin |
| Liver cancer cells | Apoptosis | ROS⬆, PIG3⬆, | [ |
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| Matrine |
| Pancreatic cancer cells | Cycle arrest | ROS, p-ERK, p-JNK, and p-P38⬆ | [ |
| Liver cancer cells | Program cell death |
| [ | ||
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| Neferine |
| Lung cancer cells | Autophagy enhances cisplatin-induced autophagic cell death | ROS⬆, GSH⬇, PI3K/Akt/mTOR⬇, LC3-II⬆ | [ |
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| Norcantharidin |
| Liver cancer cells | Apoptosis | ROS⬆, | [ |
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| Oridonin |
| Osteosarcoma cells | Apoptosis | PPAR- | [ |
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| Oroxylin A |
| Colon cancer cells | Apoptosis | UCP2⬇; ROS, MPTP, cyto C, AIF | [ |
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| Plumbagin |
| Colon cancer cells | Apoptosis | ASK1/TRAF2⬆, JNK⬆; mTORC1⬇ | [ |
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| Resveratrol |
| Lung/breast cancer cells | Apoptosis | TIGAR⬇, GSH⬇, ROS⬆, cl-PARP⬆ | [ |
| Prostate cancer cells | Apoptosis | TRX1⬇, TXNIP⬆ | [ | ||
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| Saxifragifolin D |
| Breast cancer cells | Autophagy | LC3-II, Beclin-1, and Vps34⬆; ROS-mediated ERS⬆ | [ |
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| Sophoranone |
| Leukemia cells | Apoptosis | ROS⬆, MPTP⬆, cyto C⬆, p-JNK⬆, Casp-3⬆ | [ |
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| Tetrandrine |
| Leukemia cells | Autophagy | ROS⬆, LC3 II⬆, p-Akt⬆; p21⬆, p27⬆ | [ |
| Live cancer cells | Apoptosis | ROS⬆; p-Akt, p-ERK1/2, and p-JNK⬇ | [ | ||
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| Vitexin |
| Melanoma cells | DNA damage | ROS, Bax, and PARP⬆; Bcl-2⬇ | [ |
Figure 2Treatment strategy based on redox regulation. Compared to normal cells, cancer cells have increased levels of basal ROS, resulting in the maintenance of tumor-promoting signaling in these cells. Therefore, strategies for reducing ROS by using antioxidants to prevent carcinogenesis or delay tumor growth are theoretically feasible (however, most current clinical results are not supported). However, strategies for increasing ROS to toxic levels by using ROS inducers and/or inhibiting ROS scavengers can result in the specific killing of cancer cells (such approaches seem more promising than ROS reduction strategies).