| Literature DB >> 31798348 |
Hadis Fathizadeh1, Hamed Mirzaei2, Zatollah Asemi2.
Abstract
Osteosarcoma is the most common bone tumors which consisted of malignant mesenchymal cells generating osteoid and immature bone. It has been showed that osteosarcoma is common in children and adolescents and shows high mortality rate. A variety of therapeutic approaches (i.e., resection surgery, combined with chemotherapy and radiotherapy) have been used as conventional treatments in patients with osteosarcoma. Despite several attempts to improve therapeutic response, the rate of survival for osteosarcoma has not changed during the past 3 decades. Therefore, the discovery and developing new effective therapeutic platforms are required. Along to the established anti-cancer agents, some physiological regulators such melatonin, have been emerged as new anti-cancer agents. Melatonin is an indolamine hormone which is secreted from the pineal glands during the night and acts as physiological regulator. Given that melatonin shows a wide spectrum anti-tumor impacts. Besides different biologic activities of melatonin (e.g., immunomodulation and antioxidant properties), melatonin has a crucial role in the formation of bones, and its deficiency could be directly related to bone cancers. Several in vitro and in vivo experiments evaluated the effects of melatonin on osteosarcoma and other types of bone cancer. Taken together, the results of these studies indicated that melatonin could be introduced as new therapeutic candidate or as adjuvant in combination with other anti-tumor agents in the treatment of osteosarcoma. Herein, we summarized the anti-tumor effects of melatonin for osteosarcoma cancer as well as its mechanism of action.Entities:
Keywords: Melatonin; Osteosarcoma; Therapy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31798348 PMCID: PMC6884844 DOI: 10.1186/s12935-019-1044-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell Int ISSN: 1475-2867 Impact factor: 5.722
Fig. 1Pathogenesis of osteosarcoma
Fig. 2Melatonin and its anti-cancer effects
Experimental studies that investigated the role of melatonin in bone cancer
| Type of bone cancer | Form of melatonin | Dosage | Model | Findings | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Osteosarcoma | Melatonin loaded nanoparticles (PLGA) | 3.9–500 mg/mL | In vitro (MG-63 cells) | Inhibition of MG-63 proliferation and decrease cell viability | [ |
| Ewing sarcoma | Melatonin combined with vincristine | 50 µm–1 mM | In vitro (SK-N-MC cells) | Significant enhancement in the activation of Bid and caspase-3, -8, -9 | [ |
| Osteosarcoma | Melatonin | 1000 mM | In vitro (cell line SOSP-9607) | Reductions in GSH, tumor cell vitality, migration ability, adhesion ability, up-regulated acetylated-p53 and down-regulated SIRT1 and increase in the apoptotic index | [ |
| Osteosarcoma | Melatonin | 4 mM–10 mM | In vitro (MG-63 cells) | Inhibition of the MG-63 proliferation and downregulation of cyclin D1,B1,E and CDK4, CDK1, CDK2 | [ |
| Osteosarcoma | Melatonin/PD98059 and melatonin | 4 mM | In vitro (MG-63 cells) | Prohibition of the proliferation by significantly inhibited phosphorylation of ERK1/2 | [ |
| Osteosarcoma | Melatonin | 0.25–2.0 mM | In vitro (U2OS cells) | Inhibition of the JNK pathway and reduction chemokine CCL24 | [ |
| Ewing sarcoma | Melatonin | 1 mM | In vitro (A-673, TC-71, A-4573 cells) | Reversion ewing sarcoma metabolic profile that was related to its cytotoxicity | [ |
| Ewing sarcoma | Melatonin | 1 mM | In vitro (SK-N-MC, TC-71 A673, SK-ES1, A4573) | Expression of Fas and its ligand Fas L, activation of the redox-regulated transcription factor Nuclear factor-kappaB and enhance in intracellular oxidants | [ |