| Literature DB >> 32943992 |
Mohammad Hossein Mehrzadi1, Azam Hosseinzadeh2, Kobra Bahrampour Juybari3, Saeed Mehrzadi2.
Abstract
Urological cancers are responsible for thousands of cancer-related deaths around the world. Despite all developments in therapeutic approaches for cancer therapy, the absence of efficient treatments is a critical and vital problematic issue for physicians and researchers. Furthermore, routine medical therapies contribute to several undesirable adverse events for patients, reducing life quality and survival time. Therefore, many attempts are needed to explore potent alternative or complementary treatments for great outcomes. Melatonin has multiple beneficial potential effects, including anticancer properties. Melatonin in combination with chemoradiation therapy or even alone could suppress urological cancers through affecting essential cellular pathways. This review discusses current evidence reporting the beneficial effect of melatonin in urological malignancies, including prostate cancer, bladder cancer, and renal cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Angiogenesis; Apoptosis; Autophagy; Bladder cancer; Chemotherapy; Inflammation; Melatonin; Oxidative stress; Prostate cancer; Radiotherapy; Renal cell carcinoma; Urological cancers; metastasis
Year: 2020 PMID: 32943992 PMCID: PMC7488244 DOI: 10.1186/s12935-020-01531-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell Int ISSN: 1475-2867 Impact factor: 5.722
Investigations on melatonin treatment against prostate cancer
| Melatonin dose or concentration | Targets | Effects | Model | Cell line | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 pM, 1 nM, 1 μM, 1 mM | mTOR, ERK1/2, Akt, OXPHOS, ROS | Anti-proliferative and antioxidant effects | In vitro | PNT1A | [ |
| UCM 1037 (analogue) | Androgen receptor, Akt | Anti-proliferative and cytotoxic effects against cancer cells | In vitro | LNCaP, PC3, DU145, 22Rv1 | [ |
| 1 mM | Pentose phosphate pathway | Decreased LDH activity, tricarboxylic acid cycle, ATP/AMP ratio, glucose uptake, and lactate labeling Limited glycolysis | In vitro | LNCaP , PC-3 | [ |
| 3 mg/kg | Nrf2, HIF-1α | Inhibited tumor growth | In vivo | LNCaP | [ |
| 10− 6 M | NF-κB, AR-V7, IL-6, | Delayed castration resistance development | In vitro | LNCaP, 22Rv1 | [ |
200 µg/ml 50 µM–1 mM | MAPK/ERK, IGFBP3 | Increased survival time of TRAMP mice when administered at the initiation or advanced stages | In vivo, in vitro | LNCaP | [ |
10 µg/kg 500 µM, 5 mM, 10 mM | Androgen receptor (AR), PCNA, MTR1B | proliferative and anti-apoptotic effects in prostate cells subjected to HG levels | In vivo, in vitro | PNTA1, PC-3 | [ |
| 1 mM | VEGF, HIF-1α, HIF-2α, miR-3195, miR-374b | Anti-angiogenic activity | In vitro | PC-3 | [ |
| 1 mg/kg | Nrf2, Ki67, HIF-1α, Akt | Inhibited cancer growth and exerted anti-angiogenic effects | In vivo | LNCaP | [ |
| 10− 8 M | p27, NF-κB, MT1, | Anti-proliferative effects | In vitro | LNCaP, 22Rv1 | [ |
| 1 mM | TRAIL, TNF-α | Promotes cell toxicity and cancer cell death, inhibited oxidative stress, and suppressed cancer cell proliferation | In vitro | LNCaP, PC-3 | [ |
| 10 mg/kg | GSH, MDA, SOD | Inhibited tumor growth and oxidative stress | In vivo | – | [ |
| 10− 11-10− 5 M | MT1, p27, AR | Anti-proliferative effects | In vitro | RWPE-1, 22Rv1, VCaP, LNCaP | [ |
| 1 mM | Akt/GSK-3β, HIF-1α, SPHK1, VEGF, von Hippel-Lindau | Antioxidant effects | In vitro | PC-3 | [ |
| 100 nM–2 mM | Sirt1, IGF-1)/IGFBP3, PCNA, Ki-67 | Anti-proliferative effects Inhibited tumorigenesis | In vivo, in vitro | PC-3, DU145, 22Rν1, LNCaP | [ |
| 100 µM, 1 mM, 2mM | Per2, Clock, Bmal1 | Anti-proliferative effects Caused a resynchronization of oscillatory circadian rhythm genes | In vitro | PC-3, DU145, 22Rν1, LNCaP | [ |
| 10− 8-10− 3 M | – | Inhibited viability and induced apoptosis | In vitro | PC-3, DU145, 22Rν1, LNCaP | [ |
| 1 mM | HIF-1α, | Anti-angiogenic effect | In vitro | PC-3, DU145, LNCaP | [ |
| 0–3 mM | p38, JNK | Induced apoptosis Inhibited cancer cell growth | In vitro | LNCaP | [ |
| 10− 9, 10− 8, 10− 7 | PKA, PKC, p27, MT1 | Anti-proliferative effects | In vitro | 22Rv1 | [ |
| 10− 11, 10− 5 | p27, PKA, PKC, MT1, androgen signaling | Anti-proliferative effects | In vitro | 22Rv1 | [ |
| 0.5, 1 mM | – | Induced cell cycle arrest and cellular differentiation Inhibited proliferation of cancer cells | In vitro | LNCaP, PC-3, | [ |
| 5 mg | MT1 | Anti-proliferative effects Induced stabilization of patient’s hormone-refractory disease | Human | – | [ |
| 4 µg/g | EGF, Cyclin D1 | Inhibited tumor growth and proliferation | In vivo | PC-3, DU145, LNCaP | [ |
| – | – | AR activity attenuation by melatonin is not due to inhibition of AR binding to the androgen responsive element (ARE) | In vitro | LNCaP, PC-3 | [ |
| 4 µg/g | MT1 | Anti-proliferative effects | In vivo | PC-3, LNCaP | [ |
| 0.01–100 nM | cAMP | suppressed cancer cell proliferation and induced cell cycle arrest | In vitro | DU145 | [ |
| 5 × 10−11-5 × 10 −5 | MT1, sex steroid-mediated calcium influx | Anti-proliferative effects | In vitro | LNCaP | [ |
| 0.01–1000 nM | Mel1a receptor | Anti-proliferative effects | In vitro | LNCaP | [ |
| 20 mg | IGF-1, PRL | Combination therapy with triptorelin and melatonin decreased PSA mean concentrations Melatonin reversed clinical resistance to LHRH analogue triptorelin in metastatic prostate cancer | Human | – | [ |
| 50 µg | – | Inhibited tumor growth | In vivo | Dunning | [ |
Fig. 1Melatonin (a) promotes apoptosis in prostate cancer cells through activating TNF-α/TRAIL, JNK and P38 signaling pathways, and inhibiting SIRT1 pathway, (b) inhibits angiogenesis by inhibition of HIF-1/2α and VEGF expression and (C) exerts anti-androgenic effects by inhibiting nuclear translocation of androgen receptor and (C) MT1 receptor-dependent disruption of positive interaction between androgen receptor splice variant-7 (AR-V7) expression and NF-κB/IL-6 signaling
Results from experimental studies of melatonin application against bladder cancer
| Melatonin dose or concentration | Targets | Effects | Model | Cell line | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
10 mg/kg 1 mM | cytochrome c, NF-κB, COX-2, IKKβ | Combination of melatonin and curcumin induced cell apoptosis Melatonin exerted pro-apoptotic, anti-migration, and anti-proliferative functions Melatonin synergized curcumin ability to suppress tumor growth | In vivo, in vitro | 5637, UMUC3, T24 | [ |
| 100 mg/kg | ZNF746 , p-AKT/MMP-2/MMP-9 | Inhibited cancer cell growth, invasion, and migration Induced cell cycle arrest Suppressed oxidative stress | In vivo, in vitro | HT1376, HT1197, RT4, T24 | [ |
| 10− 6 | Wnt, E-cadherin, N-cadherin Raf/MEK/ERK | Combination of valproic acid and melatonin enhanced cytotoxicity by modulating cell death pathways | In vitro | UC3 | [ |
Fig. 2Melatonin affects some signaling pathways leading to the induction of cell death and inhibition of invasion and proliferation of bladder cancer cells
A summary of current findings of melatonin for renal cancer treatment
| Melatonin dose or concentration | Targets | Effects | Model | Cell line | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
200 mg/kg 0.5, 1, 2 µmol/L | PGC1A, UCP1 | Eliminated the abnormal lipid deposits Repressed tumor progression Induced autophagy | In vivo | HK2, 786-O, A498, Caki‐1, ACHN | [ |
| 0.5–2 mM | MMP-9, JNK1/2, ERK1/2, MT1 | Suppressed metastasis and invasion | In vitro | Caki-1, Achn | [ |
| 0.1, 0.5, or 1 mM | Bim, E2F1, Sp1, proteasome | Induced apoptosis | In vitro | A549, HT29, Caki | [ |
20 mg/kg 10 µM | HIF-1α | Inhibits tumor growth and blocks tumor angiogenesis | In vivo, in vitro | RENCA | [ |
| 1 mM | CHOP | Induced apoptosis | In vitro | HCT116, HT29, Caki | [ |
| 1 mM | PUMA | Induced apoptosis | In vitro | Caki | [ |
| 1 mM | Mcl-1 | Attenuated oxaliplatin-mediated apoptosis | In vitro | Caki | [ |
| 20 mg | – | Increased survival Abrogated the negative influences of opioids on IL-2 immunotherapy cancer cells | Human | – | [ |
| 40 mg | – | Combination of immunotherapy with IL-2 plus melatonin increased survival time, and lymphocyte and eosinophil number | Human | – | [ |
| 10 mg | – | In addition to anticancer effects, low doses of human lymphoblastoid interferon and melatonin showed no toxicity in patients | Human | − | [ |
Fig. 3Melatonin suppresses RCC through affecting signaling molecules involved in metastasis and apoptosis