| Literature DB >> 32566095 |
Zhiqiang Ma1, Liqun Xu1,2, Dong Liu3, Xiaoyan Zhang1,2, Shouyin Di1, Weimiao Li1, Jiao Zhang1, Russel J Reiter4, Jing Han5, Xiaofei Li1, Xiaolong Yan1.
Abstract
Persistent senescence seems to exert detrimental effects fostering ageing and age-related disorders, such as cancer. Chemotherapy is one of the most valuable treatments for cancer, but its clinical application is limited due to adverse side effects. Melatonin is a potent antioxidant and antiageing molecule, is nontoxic, and enhances the efficacy and reduces the side effects of chemotherapy. In this review, we first summarize the mitochondrial protective role of melatonin in the context of chemotherapeutic drug-induced toxicity. Thereafter, we tabulate the protective actions of melatonin against ageing and the harmful roles induced by chemotherapy and chemotherapeutic agents, including anthracyclines, alkylating agents, platinum, antimetabolites, mitotic inhibitors, and molecular-targeted agents. Finally, we discuss several novel directions for future research in this area. The information compiled in this review will provide a comprehensive reference for the protective activities of melatonin in the context of chemotherapy drug-induced toxicity and will contribute to the design of future studies and increase the potential of melatonin as a therapeutic agent.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32566095 PMCID: PMC7260648 DOI: 10.1155/2020/6841581
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1The mechanisms underlying cytoplasmic organellar dysfunction after chemotherapy and melatonin's protective effects under these conditions. Melatonin reverses chemotherapy-induced ER stress, as well as nucleus and mitochondrial dysfunction. In the mitochondrion, chemotherapy drugs lead to electron leakage and excessive free radical production. The ROS directly causes oxidative damage to the mitochondrial respiratory chain, further resulting in elevated electron leakage, free radical production, and ATP depletion. Moreover, ROS injures mitophagy, mtDNA, and the mitochondrial membrane structure (TOM complex reduction and mitochondrial membrane lipid peroxidation increases and elevates mPTP opening), leading to membrane potential loss and proapoptosis factor release. Apart from directly scavenging free radicals, melatonin protects against mtDNA damage/mutation, activates the antioxidant defense system, activates SIRT3 to scavenge ROS, and upregulates the TOM complex, the entry gate for the majority of precursor proteins that are imported into the mitochondria. However, the role of melatonin in mitophagy is less clear. Melatonin inhibits chemotherapy-induced stimulation of ERK1/2, followed via enhanced phosphorylation of p53 by the upregulation of genes such as Bax, thus resulting in mPTP opening. In the nucleus, melatonin upregulates Nrf2 and HO-1 expression and decreases TNF-α and IL-1β levels, thus contributing to cell protection. In the ER, melatonin reverses chemotherapy-induced ER stress via the inhibition of the PI3K/AKT pathway. As a consequence, melatonin protects diverse organs after chemotherapy. Abbreviations: Akt, protein kinase B; ATP, adenosine triphosphate; IL-1β, interleukin-1β; mPTP, mitochondrial permeability transition pore; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; ERK, extracellular regulated protein kinases; HO-1, heme oxygenase-1; JNK, c-Jun-N-terminal kinases; mtDNA, mitochondrial DNA; PI3K, phosphoinositide 3 kinase; ROS, reactive oxygen species; SIRT3, silent information regulator 3; SP, substance P; TOM, translocases in the outer membrane.
Protective effects and mechanisms of melatonin action against the side effect induced by chemotherapy agents.
| Chemotherapy agents | Experimental studies | Drugs and doses | Administration route | Outcomes | Underlying mechanisms | References |
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| Anthracyclines | NIH3T3 cells | DOX (2.6 | Countered apoptosis generated by DOX alone | AMPK-Ppar gamma-dependent mechanisms | [ | |
| Male Wistar-Albino rats | DOX (18 mg/kg) + melatonin (10 mg/kg/day, 7 days) | Intraperitoneal | Protected the heart against DOX-induced cardiotoxicity | Melatonin treatment prevented the elevation of the ST segment and R amplitude, as well as the elevation of cardiac injury markers and lipid peroxidation, and it prevented the decrease of antioxidant enzyme activity | [ | |
| Male Sprague-Dawley rats | DOX (10 mg/kg) + melatonin (15 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin controlled oxidative stress and modulated iron, ferritin, and transferrin levels | Ameliorated oxidative stress by controlling iron and binding protein levels | [ | |
| Buffalo strain rats | DOX (2.5 mg/kg) + melatonin (20 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin stimulated the activity of protective antioxidative enzymes in myocardial cells of rats | Melatonin increased GSH levels and stimulated CAT activity | [ | |
| Sprague-Dawley rats | DOX (15 mg/kg) + melatonin (84 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin maintained the plasma zinc levels | Zinc accumulation protects against oxidative stress and melatonin inhibited the DOX-induced decrease in plasma zinc levels | [ | |
| Male Wistar rats | DOX (7.5 mg/kg) + melatonin (6.0 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin prevented DOX-induced lipid peroxidation in rat liver | Melatonin-induced gene expression changes | [ | |
| Male Wistar rats | Melatonin (90 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Cardiac function was improved and lipid peroxidation was decreased | Melatonin provides protection against DOX toxicity via an attenuation of lipid peroxidation | [ | |
| Ehrlich ascite carcinoma-bearing mice | DOX (4 mg/kg/week, 2 weeks) + melatonin (5 mg/kg/day, 15 days) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin protected against cardiotoxicity and enhanced its antitumor activity to a more significant extent than did vitamin E | The cardiac contents of total protein, GSH, and SOD were increased, while the cardiac content of MDA was decreased | [ | |
| Male Wistar rats | Epirubicin (10 mg/kg) + melatonin (200 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin protected against cardiotoxicity induced by epirubicin | Melatonin was partially attributed to the suppression of epirubicin-induced nitrozative stress | [ | |
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| Alkylating agents | HBE cells | Yperite or with MEC + melatonin (100 | Melatonin prevented mustard-induced anoikis | Inhibition of caspase-dependent mitochondrial permeability transition | [ | |
| NMRI mice | CP (200 mg/kg) + melatonin at different concentrations (2.5, 5, 10, and 20 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin prevented CP-induced oxidative toxicity in mouse lung tissues | The activities of the antioxidant defense system, ROS scavenging, and free radical quenching were increased | [ | |
| Female Wistar rats | CP (75 mg/kg) + melatonin (5 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin significantly improved bladder symptoms and histological damage due to CP-induced cystitis | Diminishing bladder oxidative stress, blocking iNOS and peroxynitrite production, upregulating HO-1, and downregulating the expression of SP | [ | |
| Male Sprague-Dawley rats | CP (150 mg/kg) + melatonin (10 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin treatment reduced bladder damage and apoptosis | Upregulating Nrf2 and nuclear transcription factor NF- | [ | |
| Male ICR mice | CP (150 mg/kg) + melatonin (10 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin cotreatment prevented the development of hyperplastic urothelium | Decreasing proliferation and apoptotic indices and causing the higher differentiation state of superficial urothelial cells | [ | |
| Male Wistar albino rats | CP (100 mg/kg) + melatonin (10 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin may reduce CP-induced testicular damage | The antioxidative properties of indoleamine existed in the chemical structure | [ | |
| NMRI mice | CP (60 mg/kg) + melatonin (2.5, 5, 10, and 20 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin has potent antigenotoxic effects and suppression of chromosome aberrations | Scavenging of free radicals and increased antioxidant status | [ | |
| Albino Wistar rats | CP (75 mg/kg) + melatonin (40 or 100 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin resulted in global ANS activity elevation, with a marked sympathetic tone predominance | Melatonin modulates autonomic activity via nonreceptor mechanisms | [ | |
| Male Wistar rats | HN2 (0.5 mg/kg) + melatonin (20 mg/kg or 40 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin reduced mustard-induced toxicity in the lungs | Melatonin restored oxidative and nitrosative stress markers in a dose-dependent manner | [ | |
| Male Sprague-Dawley rats | MEC (3.5 mg/kg) + melatonin (100 mg/kg) | MEC via transdermal route and melatonin via intraperitoneal route | Melatonin has anti-inflammatory properties, as well as antioxidant properties | These increases and elevated NOx levels were ameliorated | [ | |
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| Platinum | Hepatocellular carcinoma HepG2 cells | Melatonin (1 mM) + cisplatin (20 | Melatonin attenuated cisplatin-induced HepG2 cell death | Regulation of mTOR and ERCC1 expressions | [ | |
| SK-LU-1 cell line | Cisplatin (11 and 4 | Melatonin enhanced cisplatin-induced cytotoxicity and apoptosis | Elevating mitochondrial membrane depolarization, activating caspases-3/7, and inducing cell cycle arrest in the S phase | [ | ||
| SH-SY5Y cells | Melatonin (10 | Melatonin protects against the oxaliplatin-induced pain and neuropathic deficits | Preventing the loss of mitochondrial membrane potential ( | [ | ||
| HT-29 cells | Oxa (0-50 | Melatonin improved mitochondrial electron transport chain function and maintained cellular bioenergetics by improving the ATP levels | Ameliorating nitrooxidative stress and preventing nitrosylation of proteins and loss of antioxidant enzymes | [ | ||
| SH-SY5Y cells | Oxa (10 | Melatonin attenuated oxaliplatin-induced apoptosis | Inhibition of GSH depletion and Mcl-1 downregulation | [ | ||
| Male Sprague Dawley rats | Cisplatin (7 mg/kg) + melatonin (5 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin markedly reduced renal cytotoxicity and DNA fragmentation | Scavenge hydroxyl radical (•OH) directly | [ | |
| Male Wistar rats | Melatonin (4 mg/kg, 10 days) + cisplatin (7 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin suppressed cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity | Increasing Nrf2 accumulation in the nuclear fraction and increasing the expression of HO-1 | [ | |
| Female Swiss mice | Melatonin (5, 10, or 20 mg/kg) + cisplatin (5 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin effectively protected the ovaries against cisplatin-induced damage | The MT1 receptor and melatonin antioxidant effects | [ | |
| Female CD-1 mice | Cisplatin (2 mg/kg) + melatonin (15 or 30 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin attenuated cisplatin-induced follicle loss | Preventing the phosphorylation of PTEN/AKT/FOXO3a pathway | [ | |
| Wistar rats | Melatonin (10 mg/kg) + Oxa (4 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin ameliorated the mitochondrial lipid peroxidation levels and protein carbonyl content | Modulating altered nonenzymatic and enzymatic antioxidants and complex enzymes of mitochondria | [ | |
| Male Sprague-Dawley rats | Melatonin (20 mg/kg + Oxa 5 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin had anti-inflammatory and antiallodynia effects | Melatonin inhibited synthesis of inflammatory mediators | [ | |
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| Antimetabolite | Male Wistar rats | Melatonin (20 and 40 mg/kg) + MTX (7 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin reduced small intestinal damage and ameliorates MTX-induced enteritis | Attenuating oxidative stress and restoring the activities of the antioxidant enzymes | [ |
| Male Wistar rats | Melatonin (20 and 40 mg/kg) + MTX (7 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin protected against MTX-induced small intestinal damage | Attenuation of nitrosative stress, protein tyrosine nitration, and PARP activation | [ | |
| Male Wistar rats | MTX (7 mg/kg) + melatonin (40 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin reduced renal damage via antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activities | Reduction of oxidative stress and alteration in the activity of antioxidant enzymes, as well as elevation in myeloperoxidase activity | [ | |
| Male Sprague Dawley rats | MTX (13.4 mg/kg) + melatonin (10 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin prevented MTX-induced hepatotoxicity | Through their antioxidant- and radical-scavenging activities | [ | |
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| Mitotic inhibitors | Sprague Dawley rats, the 50B11 immortalized DRG neuronal stem cell line | Paclitaxel (100 | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin protected against neuropathic pain and limits paclitaxel-induced mitochondrial dysfunction in vitro | Limiting the development of mechanical hypersensitivity | [ |
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| Molecular-targeted agents | Male Sprague-Dawley rats | Trastuzumab (10 mg/kg) + melatonin (10 mg/kg, 2 days) | Intraperitoneal | Melatonin was effective in preventing trastuzumab-induced cardiotoxicity | Reversing oxidative stress markers | [ |
Abbreviations: CAT, catalase; CP, cyclophosphamide; DOX, doxorubicin; GSH, glutathione; MEC, mechlorethamin; MTX, methotrexate; Oxa, oxaliplatin; PARP, poly(ADP-ribose)-polymerase.
Figure 2Protection of melatonin against chemotherapy drug-induced damage in various organs.