| Literature DB >> 33185690 |
Alexa N Carrera1,2, Marianne K O Grant1, Beshay N Zordoky1.
Abstract
Cardiovascular complications have been frequently reported in cancer patients and survivors, mainly because of various cardiotoxic cancer treatments. Despite the known cardiovascular toxic effects of these treatments, they are still clinically used because of their effectiveness as anti-cancer agents. In this review, we discuss the growing body of evidence suggesting that inhibition of the cytochrome P450 1B1 enzyme (CYP1B1) can be a promising therapeutic strategy that has the potential to prevent cancer treatment-induced cardiovascular complications without reducing their anti-cancer effects. CYP1B1 is an extrahepatic enzyme that is expressed in cardiovascular tissues and overexpressed in different types of cancers. A growing body of evidence is demonstrating a detrimental role of CYP1B1 in both cardiovascular diseases and cancer, via perturbed metabolism of endogenous compounds, production of carcinogenic metabolites, DNA adduct formation, and generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Several chemotherapeutic agents have been shown to induce CYP1B1 in cardiovascular and cancer cells, possibly via activating the Aryl hydrocarbon Receptor (AhR), ROS generation, and inflammatory cytokines. Induction of CYP1B1 is detrimental in many ways. First, it can induce or exacerbate cancer treatment-induced cardiovascular complications. Second, it may lead to significant chemo/radio-resistance, undermining both the safety and effectiveness of cancer treatments. Therefore, numerous preclinical studies demonstrate that inhibition of CYP1B1 protects against chemotherapy-induced cardiotoxicity and prevents chemo- and radio-resistance. Most of these studies have utilized phytochemicals to inhibit CYP1B1. Since phytochemicals have multiple targets, future studies are needed to discern the specific contribution of CYP1B1 to the cardioprotective and chemo/radio-sensitizing effects of these phytochemicals.Entities:
Keywords: CYP1B1; Cardio-Oncology; Phytochemicals; chemotherapy; radiation therapy
Year: 2020 PMID: 33185690 PMCID: PMC7672255 DOI: 10.1042/CS20200310
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Sci (Lond) ISSN: 0143-5221 Impact factor: 6.124
Figure 1CYP1B1 is a central player in the metabolism of endogenous compounds
CYP1B1 metabolizes estradiol, testosterone, arachidonic acid, retinol, and melatonin to the biologically active metabolites: 2- and 4-hydroxyestradiol, 6β-hydroxytestosterone, mid-chain and terminal hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acids (HETEs), epoxyeicosatrienoic acids (EETs), retinoic acid, and 5-hydroxymelatonin, respectively.
Role of CYP1B1 in cardiovascular diseases
| Cardiovascular pathology | Model | Effect on CYP1B1 expression | Effect of CYP1B1 inhibition | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cardiac hypertrophy | Isoproterenol-induced cardiac hypertrophy in male SD rats | Up-regulation of CYP1B1 gene and protein expression in the heart | Not reported | [ |
| Isoproterenol-induced cellular hypertrophy in RL-14 cells | Induction of | Inhibition of CYP1B1 by TMS or siRNA ameliorated isoproterenol-induced cellular hypertrophy | [ | |
| Abdominal aortic constriction in male SD rats | Increase in the protein expression of CYP1B1 | 2-ME inhibited left ventricular hypertrophy via antioxidant and anti-inflammatory mechanisms | [ | |
| Angiotensin II-induced cellular hypertrophy in RL-14 and H9c2 cells | Induction of the protein expression of CYP1B1 and increased formation of its associated mid-chain HETEs | Inhibition of CYP1B1 by TMS, resveratrol, fluconazole or 19-HETE attenuated angiotensin II-induced cellular hypertrophy | [ | |
| Angiotensin II-induced cardiac hypertrophy in male SD rats | Induction of CYP1B1 protein expression, but no effect on | Inhibition of CYP1B1 by TMS or 19-HETE ameliorated angiotensin II-induced cardiac hypertrophy | [ | |
| Hypertension | DOCA salt-induced hypertension in male Sprague–Dawley rats | No significant effect on CYP1B1 expression or activity | Inhibition of CYP1B1 by TMS reduced blood pressure, ameliorated cardiovascular and renal hypertrophy, and prevented vascular reactivity and endothelial dysfunction | [ |
| Male SHR rats | Higher CYP1B1 activity in the aorta, heart and kidney of SHRs as compared with control WKY rats | Inhibition of CYP1B1 by TMS reduced blood pressure, decreased vascular reactivity, cardiovascular hypertrophy, endothelial and renal dysfunction, and cardiac and renal fibrosis | [ | |
| Angiotensin II-induced hypertension in intact male and OVX female mice | Not reported | Inhibition of CYP1b1 with 2-ME reduced blood pressure in ovariectomized female and intact male mice | [ | |
| Angiotensin II-induced hypertension in male mice | Increased renal Cyp1b1 activity, increased 12-HETE and 20-HETE metabolites | [ | ||
| Angiotensin II-induced hypertension in female mice | Increased cardiac Cyp1b1 protein expression and catalytic activity | [ | ||
| Angiotensin II-induced hypertension in male mice | Increased cardiac cytochrome P450 1B1 activity and plasma levels of 6β-hydroxytestosterone | [ | ||
| Atherosclerosis | ApoE-deficient male mice on atherogenic diet | Increased cardiac Cyp1b1 activity | Cyp1b1 inhibition by TMS or gene disruption ameliorated atherosclerosis, and reduced blood pressure, endothelial dysfunction, oxidative stress and plasma lipids | [ |
| Aortic aneurysm | Angiotensin II-induced aortic aneurysm in male ApoE-deficient mice | Not reported | Cyp1b1 inhibition by TMS or | [ |
| Heavy metal-induced cardiotoxicity | Acute arsenic toxicity in male C57Bl/6 mice | Induction of CYP1B1 gene expression | Not reported | [ |
| Acute mercury toxicity in male C57Bl/6 mice | Induction of cardiac | Not reported | [ | |
| Cadmium-induced toxicity in newborn chicks | Increase in total CYP1B1 expression | Not reported | [ |
Abbreviations: ApoE, apolipoprotein E; DOCA, deoxycorticosterone acetate; SHR, spontaneously hypertensive rat; TMS, 2,4,3′,5′-tetramethoxystilbene; WKY, Wistar–Kyoto rat; 2-ME, 2-methoxyestradiol.
Effect of cancer treatments on CYP1B1 expression
| Agent | Model | Dose/concentration | Effect on CYP1B1 | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cyclophosphamide | HL-60S and HL-60R | 100 and 500 µg/ml | Concentration-dependent inhibition of gene expression | [ |
| Doxorubicin (DOX) | Zebrafish | 100 μM | Induction of gene and protein expression | [ |
| C57Bl/6 male and female mice | 20 mg/kg single dose | Induction of gene expression in the heart of male mice only | [ | |
| Sprague–Dawley male rats | 3 mg/kg × 5 doses (over 2-week-period) | Induction of gene expression in the heart Increased mid-chain HETEs | [ | |
| Sprague–Dawley male rats | 2.5 mg/kg × 6 doses (over 2-week-period) | Induction of gene expression in the liver and kidney | [ | |
| Sprague–Dawley male rats | 15 mg/kg single dose | Induction of gene expression in the liver and kidney | [ | |
| Sprague–Dawley male rats | 15 mg/kg single dose | Induction of gene and protein expression in the heart | [ | |
| RL-14 human cardiac-derived cells | 10 μM | Induction of gene and protein expression and catalytic activity | [ | |
| RL-14 human cardiac-derived cells | 10 μM | Induction gene and protein expression and catalytic activity | [ | |
| H9c2 rat cardiac-derived cells | 1–10 μM | Concentration-dependent induction of CYP1B1 gene expression | [ | |
| Daunorubicin | Sprague–Dawley male rats | 5 mg/kg single dose | No change in gene or protein expression in the heart | [ |
| Dasatinib | H9c2 rat cardiac-derived cells | 0–160 μM for | Induction of gene expression | [ |
| Docetaxel | MDA 453 | 8 ng/ml | Induction of gene expression in MDA-453 and BT-20 cells, No change in MCF-7 | [ |
| Sunitinib | Wistar albino male rats | 25, 50, and 100 mg/kg daily for 4 weeks | Dose-dependent induction of gene and protein expression in the liver and kidney | [ |
| Radiation | Human skin | Ultraviolet B | Induction of gene and protein expression in skin biopsies | [ |
| Peripheral blood mononuclear cells | Solar radiation | Significant correlation between solar radiation and CYP1B1 mRNA levels | [ | |
| Zebrafish embryos | Ultraviolet B | Induction of gene expression | [ | |
| HaCaT human keratinocytes | Ultraviolet B | Induction of CYP1B1 gene transcript | [ | |
| HaCaT human keratinocytes | Ultraviolet | Induction of protein expression and DNA adduct formation | [ |
Figure 2Possible mechanisms of DOX-mediated induction of CYP1B1
DOX may induce CYP1B1 via different mechanisms. First, DOX may directly or indirectly activate the AhR. Upon its nuclear translocation and binding to the AhR Nuclear Translocator (ARNT), the AhR–ARNT heterodimer activates the XRE to induce CYP1B1 gene transcription. DOX may also induce CYP1B1 by generating ROS and eliciting an inflammatory response via IL-6 and TNF-α. Estrogen can also induce CYP1B1 gene expression via ERα; however, the role of DOX in this pathway is not known. Induction of CYP1B1 leads to both cardiovascular toxicity and increased chemoresistance.
Cardioprotective and chemosensitizing effects of CYP1B1 inhibitors toward anthracyclines
| Inhibitor | Inhibition IC50 (nM) | Cardioprotective effects | Chemosensitizing effects |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acacetin | 7–14 [ | Not reported | Enhances the chemotherapeutic effect of DOX in non-small-cell lung carcinoma cells [ |
| Isorhamnetin | 17 [ | Protection from chronic DOX-induced cardiotoxicity | Potentiates DOX-induced toxicity in MCF-7, HepG2, and Hep2 cancer cells [ |
| Chrysin | 24–270 [ | Protection from acute and chronic DOX-induced cardiotoxicity | Enhanced cytotoxicity of DOX in a spheroid culture model of human lung squamous cell carcinoma [ |
| Apigenin | 25 [ | Attenuated chronic DOX-induced cardiotoxicity in | Augmented the cytotoxic effect of DOX against HepG2 cells [ |
| Kaempferol | 47 [ | Protected from chronic DOX-induced cardiotoxicity | Potentiated the cytotoxic effect of DOX in glioblastoma cells [ |
| Quercetin | 77 [ | Protected rat and human cardiomyocytes and H9c2 cells from DOX-induced toxicity | Enhanced DOX anti-cancer effects in xenografts of leukemia P388 cells [ |
| Luteolin | 79 [ | Protected against DOX-induced cardiomyocyte toxicity | Luteolin (10 μM) attenuated the cytotoxic effects of DOX in breast cancer cells MCF-7 cells [ |
| Genistein | IC50 = 2100 nm [ | Protected from chronic DOX-induced cardiotoxicity | Potentiated the cytotoxic effect of DOX in MCF-7, MCF-7/ADR cells, MDA-MB-231 (breast), PC-3 (prostate), H460 (lung), and BxPC-3 (pancreas) cancer cells [ |
| Resveratrol, reviewed in [ | 1400–40000 [ | Protection from DOX-induced cardiomyocyte toxicity in H9c2 cells [ | Potentiated DOX-induced cytotoxicity in U373MG glioblastoma, MCF-7 breast cancer cells, LNCaP prostate carcinoma, Reh B-cell leukemia cells, Human ovarian cancer cells OVCAR-3 and uterine (Ishikawa) cells, Human hepatocellular carcinoma cell line (HepG2), Cervical cancer cell line (HeLa), MDA-MB-231 cells, HT-29 human colon carcinoma cells, Hela and Caski cells, HCT 116 and HT-29, Lymphoblastic leukemia cell line (MOLT-4), Human multiple myeloma cell line (U266B1), Burkitt’s lymphoma cell line (Raji cell), canine hemangiosarcoma cells [ |
| Berberine | Ki = 44, IC50 = 90–190 [ | Protection from acute DOX-induced cardiotoxicity [ | Enhanced sensitivity to DOX in Jurkat, HeLa, and lung cancer cells |
| 2,4,3′,5′-tetramethoxy-stilbene | IC50 = 6 [ | Protection from chronic DOX-induced cardiotoxicity in rats | Not reported |
Figure 3The potential role of CYP1B1 in cardio-oncology
Chemo- and radiation therapy induce CYP1B1, leading to perturbation in the metabolism of arachidonic acid (ARA), steroids, melatonin, and retinol, and activation of pro-carcinogens, production of oxidative stress, and DNA adduct formation. Induction of CYP1B1 induces and/or exacerbates therapy-induced cardiovascular toxicity and increases resistance to chemo- and radiation therapy. These detrimental effects can be potentially mitigated by phytochemical and synthetic CYP1B1 inhibitors.