👤 Pavanin LA

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10
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Also published as: Ridnour LA, Esparza LA, Konnor La, K La, Batista de Carvalho LA, Barrios LA, Adams LA, Ferreira LA, P La
articles
Basudhar D, Ridnour LA, Cheng R +3 more · 2025 · Coordination Chemistry Reviews · Elsevier · added 2026-04-20
Small redox active molecules such as reactive nitrogen and oxygen species and hydrogen sulfide have emerged as important biological mediators that are involved in various physiological and pathophysio Show more
Small redox active molecules such as reactive nitrogen and oxygen species and hydrogen sulfide have emerged as important biological mediators that are involved in various physiological and pathophysiological processes. Advancement in understanding of cellular mechanisms that tightly regulate both generation and reactivity of these molecules is central to improved management of various disease states including cancer and cardiovascular dysfunction. Imbalance in the production of redox active molecules can lead to damage of critical cellular components such as cell membranes, proteins and DNA and thus may trigger the onset of disease. These small inorganic molecules react independently as well as in a concerted manner to mediate physiological responses. This review provides a general overview of the redox biology of these key molecules, their diverse chemistry relevant to physiological processes and their interrelated nature in cellular signaling. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ccr.2015.06.001
review
MdS VERZA, P Soni, GR Duddukuri +646 more · 2025 · Oncology Research · added 2026-04-20
MdS VERZA, P Soni, GR Duddukuri, F Bray, M Laversanne, H Sung, J Ferlay, RL Siegel, I Soerjomataram, R Malhotra, N Manoharan, SS Deo, S Bhatnagar, JE Carroll, JE Bower, PA Ganz, B Li, H Ming, S Qin, EC Nice, J Dong, Z Du, C Swanton, E Bernard, C Abbosh, F André, J Auwerx, A Balmain, LCP Dharshini, RR Rasmi, C Kathirvelan, KM Kumar, KM Saradhadevi, KM Sakthivel, K Li, Z Deng, C Lei, X Ding, J Li, C Wang, M Neganova, J Liu, Y Aleksandrova, S Klochkov, R Fan, Y Ren, R Wang, S Weng, H Xu, Y Zhang, S Chen, FU Vaidya, A Sufiyan Chhipa, V Mishra, VK Gupta, SG Rawat, A Kumar, M Cai, XL Song, XA Li, M Chen, J Guo, DH Yang, D Dima, D Jiang, DJ Singh, M Hasipek, HS Shah, F Ullah, ET Bin, A Shahriar, AR Mahmud, T Rahman, MH Abir, MFR Siddiquee, S Milewska, K Niemirowicz-Laskowska, G Siemiaszko, P Nowicki, AZ Wilczewska, H Car, WMC van den Boogaard, DSJ Komninos, WP Vermeij, J Moon, I Kitty, K Renata, F Zhao, W Kim, N Chatterjee, GC Walker, R Huang, PK Zhou, FJ Groelly, M Fawkes, RA Dagg, AN Blackford, M Tarsounas, CJ Lord, A Ashworth, ZE Karanjawala, U Grawunder, CL Hsieh, MR Lieber, E Ryan, R Hollingworth, R Grand, US Srinivas, BWQ Tan, BA Vellayappan, AD Jeyasekharan, Y Baiken, D Kanayeva, S Taipakova, R Groisman, AA Ishchenko, D Begimbetova, L Sarmini, M Meabed, E Emmanouil, G Atsaves, E Robeska, BT Karwowski, S Neri, S Guidotti, C Bini, S Pelotti, S D’Adamo, M Minguzzi, T Murmann-Konda, A Soni, M Stuschke, G Iliakis, H Sies, VV Belousov, NS Chandel, MJ Davies, DP Jones, GE Mann, Y Wang, F Li, L Mao, Y Liu, AE Vendrov, MD Stevenson, A Lozhkin, T Hayami, NA Holland, X Yang, MT Keeney, EM Rocha, EK Hoffman, K Farmer, R Di Maio, J Weir, K Wu, AE El Zowalaty, VI Sayin, T Papagiannakopoulos, B Zhang, C Pan, C Feng, C Yan, Y Yu, Z Chen, JYS Lim, JQ Eu, AKMH Chan, BC Goh, L Wang, V Purohit, DM Simeone, CA Lyssiotis, MJ Iqbal, A Kabeer, Z Abbas, HA Siddiqui, D Calina, J Sharifi-Rad, V Shah, HY Lam, CHM Leong, R Sakaizawa, JS Shah, AP Kumar, X An, W Yu, D Tang, L Yang, X Chen, L Sun, N Ouyang, S Shafi, R Zhao, J Pan, L Hong, J Xie, Z Lai, X Zheng, H Liao, Y Xian, Q Li, JN Rana, S Mumtaz, EH Choi, I Han, D Averill-Bates, A Mohsin, K Haneef, A Ilyas, S Zarina, Z Hashim, N Sadeghi, G Boissonneault, M Tavalaee, MH Nasr-Esfahani, M Labrie, JS Brugge, GB Mills, IK Zervantonakis, C Glorieux, S Liu, D Trachootham, P Huang, B Farhood, M Najafi, E Salehi, N Hashemi Goradel, MS Nashtaei, N Khanlarkhani, KF Zahra, R Lefter, A Ali, EC Abdellah, C Trus, A Ciobica, M Wang, M Chang, C Li, Q Chen, Z Hou, B Xing, A O’Reilly, W Zhao, S Wickström, ESJ Arnér, R Kiessling, S Murakami, Y Kusano, K Okazaki, T Akaike, H Motohashi, F Chen, M Xiao, S Hu, MT Bayo Jimenez, K Frenis, O Hahad, S Steven, G Cohen, A Cuadrado, A Namani, Y Li, XJ Wang, X Tang, T Sengoku, M Shiina, K Suzuki, K Hamada, K Sato, A Uchiyama, M McMahon, N Thomas, K Itoh, M Yamamoto, JD Hayes, W Tian, M Rojo de la Vega, CJ Schmidlin, A Ooi, DD Zhang, Y Katoh, K Iida, MI Kang, A Kobayashi, M Mizukami, KI Tong, S Fourquet, R Guerois, D Biard, MB Toledano, A Raghunath, K Sundarraj, R Nagarajan, F Arfuso, J Bian, JW Kaspar, SK Niture, AK Jaiswal, MY Song, DY Lee, KS Chun, EH Kim, L Liang, M Matsumoto, K Iwata, A Umemura, F He, S Adinolfi, T Patinen, A Jawahar Deen, S Pitkänen, J Härkönen, E Kansanen, N Wakabayashi, T Ishii, K Igarashi, JD Engel, SC Lo, X Li, MT Henzl, LJ Beamer, M Hannink, YS Keum, B Choi, P Canning, FJ Sorrell, AN Bullock, T Clifford, JP Acton, SP Cocksedge, KAB Davies, SJ Bailey, M Thiruvengadam, B Venkidasamy, U Subramanian, R Samynathan, M Ali Shariati, M Rebezov, M Ruwali, R Shukla, M Hayashi, T Papgiannakopoulos, H Robertson, AT Dinkova-Kostova, K Taguchi, SB Lee, BN Sellers, GM DeNicola, YC Tang, YJ Chuang, HH Chang, SH Juang, GC Yen, JY Chang, S Kalthoff, U Ehmer, N Freiberg, MP Manns, CP Strassburg, JF Lin, ZX Liu, DL Chen, RZ Huang, F Cao, K Yu, Z Zhu, S Du, Y Du, J Ren, G Ying, Z Yan, C Biswas, N Shah, M Muthu, P La, AP Fernando, S Sengupta, FJ Lei, JY Chiang, HJ Chang, DC Chen, HL Wang, HA Yang, TW Kensler, L Baird, S Dayalan Naidu, TH Rushmore, MR Morton, CB Pickett, R Venugopal, P Nioi, T Chiba, S Takahashi, JL Xiao, HY Liu, CC Sun, CF Tang, W Tu, H Wang, S Li, Q Liu, H Sha, P Stenvinkel, CJ Meyer, GA Block, GM Chertow, PG Shiels, AV Ulasov, AA Rosenkranz, GP Georgiev, AS Sobolev, A Uruno, X Luo, X Zhu, Y Chen, B Xu, X Bai, DJ Schaer, N Schulthess-Lutz, L Baselgia, K Hansen, RM Buzzi, R Humar, X Wang, S Su, Y Zhu, X Cheng, C Cheng, L Chen, FV Reinema, FCGJ Sweep, GJ Adema, WJM Peeters, JWM Martens, J Bussink, D Karagiannis, W Wu, A Li, M Yip, C Gur, FM Kandemir, C Caglayan, E Satıcı, D Sapochnik, AR Raimondi, V Medina, J Naipauer, EA Mesri, O Coso, Y Pu, Y Tan, C Zang, C Cai, L Kong, HH Chen, JY Yao, YT Chen, A Sharma, AK Singh, AA Osman, E Arslan, M Bartels, C Michikawa, A Lindemann, K Tomczak, MA Skowron, G Niegisch, P Albrecht, G van Koeveringe, A Romano, P Albers, H Zhang, J Xu, Y Long, A Maimaitijiang, Z Su, W Li, IC Taritsa, ET Fossel, A Garufi, G Pistritto, V D’Orazi, M Cirone, G D’Orazi, K Lisek, E Campaner, Y Ciani, D Walerych, G Del Sal, A Nazari, P Osati, S Seifollahy Fakhr, F Faghihkhorasani, M Ghanaatian, X Gu, C Mu, R Zheng, Z Zhang, Q Zhang, T Liang, J Wang, J Yang, M Cao, Z Zhao, B Cao, S Yu, D Xue, X Zhou, J Qiu, X Hou, M Huang, J Jin, S Dastghaib, SM Shafiee, F Ramezani, N Ashtari, F Tabasi, J Saffari-Chaleshtori, M Oskomić, A Tomić, L Barbarić, A Matić, DC Kindl, M Matovina, MH Nguyen, NYT Nguyen, YS Chen, HT Nguyen Le, HT Vo, CH Yen, S Mirzaei, A Zarrabi, F Hashemi, A Zabolian, H Saleki, N Azami, L Lin, Q Wu, F Lu, J Lei, Y Zhou, J Krishnaraj, T Yamamoto, R Ohki, G Barrera, MA Cucci, M Grattarola, C Dianzani, G Muzio, S Pizzimenti, L Mosca, A Ilari, F Fazi, YG Assaraf, G Colotti, Z Wang, B Yang, Y Xie, Feng S ling, PY Yan, XJ Yao, XX Fan, L Gan, W Wang, J Jiang, K Tian, W Liu, Z Cao, S Karathedath, BM Rajamani, SM Musheer Aalam, A Abraham, S Varatharajan, P Krishnamurthy, C Monge, A Roetto, E Caputo, M Sorice, E Profumo, A Capozzi, S Recalchi, G Riitano, B Di Veroli, P Paramasivan, IH Kankia, SP Langdon, YY Deeni, R Srivastava, R Fernández-Ginés, JA Encinar, G Wells, P Wadowski, M Juszczak, K Woźniak, E Crisman, P Duarte, E Dauden, MI Rodríguez-Franco, MG López, D Zhang, KE Aldrich, L Lockwood, AL Odom, KT Liby, R Afjei, N Sadeghipour, SU Kumar, M Pandrala, V Kumar, SV Malhotra, K Gall Trošelj, M Tomljanović, M Jaganjac, T Matijević Glavan, A Čipak Gašparović, L Milković, M Poornashree, H Kumar, R Ajmeer, R Jain, V Jain, F Pouremamali, A Pouremamali, M Dadashpour, N Soozangar, F Jeddi, W Chen, Z Sun, T Jiang, Z Huang, D Fang, M Robert, BK Kennedy, KC Crasta, S Tao, A Lau, MS Joo, SB Shin, EJ Kim, HJ Koo, H Yim, SG Kim, X Liu, N Hu, RJ Mailloux, U Jakob, J Pi, JW Kupiec-Weglinski Show less
Cancer remains a major global health burden, with rising incidence and mortality linked to aging populations and increased exposure to genotoxic agents. Oxidative stress plays a critical role in cance Show more
Cancer remains a major global health burden, with rising incidence and mortality linked to aging populations and increased exposure to genotoxic agents. Oxidative stress plays a critical role in cancer development, progression, and resistance to therapy. The nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (NRF2)-Kelch-like ECH-associated protein 1 (KEAP1)-antioxidant response element (ARE) signaling pathway is central to maintaining redox balance by regulating the expression of antioxidant and detoxification genes. Under physiological conditions, this pathway protects cells from oxidative damage, however, sustained activation of NRF2 in cancer, often due to mutations in KEAP1, supports tumor cell survival, drug resistance, and metabolic reprogramming. Recent studies demonstrate that NRF2 enhances glutathione (GSH) synthesis, induces detoxifying enzymes, and upregulates drug efflux transporters, collectively contributing to resistance against chemotherapy and targeted therapies. The inhibition of NRF2 using small molecules or dietary phytochemicals has shown promise in restoring drug sensitivity in preclinical cancer models. This review highlights the dual role of NRF2 in redox regulation and cancer therapy, emphasizing its potential as a therapeutic target. While targeting NRF2 offers a novel approach to overcoming treatment resistance, further research is needed to enhance specificity and facilitate clinical translation. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.32604/or.2025.065755
ROS amino-acid anticancer review synthesis
Li Xing, Shaohui Wang, H Sung +944 more · 2023 · Cell Death Discovery · Nature · added 2026-04-20
Li Xing, Shaohui Wang, H Sung, J Ferlay, RL Siegel, M Laversanne, I Soerjomataram, A Jemal, C Xia, X Dong, H Li, M Cao, D Sun, S He, W Cao, HD Chen, YW Yu, N Li, WQ Chen, BC Bade, CS Dela Cruz, AH Nielsen, U Fredberg, F Wu, L Wang, C Zhou, MI Toki, K Harrington, KN Syrigos, R Rosell, N Karachaliou, O Arrieta, RS Herbst, D Morgensztern, C Boshoff, ZF Lim, PC Ma, J Liu, M Hong, Y Li, D Chen, Y Wu, Y Hu, SJ Dixon, KM Lemberg, MR Lamprecht, R Skouta, EM Zaitsev, CE Gleason, J Li, F Cao, HL Yin, ZJ Huang, ZT Lin, N Mao, DH Manz, NL Blanchette, BT Paul, FM Torti, SV Torti, Y Mou, J Wang, J Wu, D He, C Zhang, C Duan, RS Hotchkiss, A Strasser, JE McDunn, PE Swanson, DL Vaux, D Moujalled, JR Liddell, ML Coleman, EA Sahai, M Yeo, M Bosch, A Dewar, MF Olson, M Suzanne, H Steller, X Chen, PB Comish, D Tang, R Kang, JR Hunt, MK Georgieff, IV Milto, IV Suhodolo, VD Prokopieva, TK Klimenteva, DJ Lane, AM Merlot, ML Huang, DH Bae, PJ Jansson, S Sahni, MW Hentze, MU Muckenthaler, B Galy, C Camaschella, D Galaris, A Barbouti, K Pantopoulos, T Nakamura, I Naguro, H Ichijo, C Yu, W Hou, Y Xie, X Song, X Sun, MT Lotze, HJ Zeh, A Donovan, CA Lima, JL Pinkus, GS Pinkus, LI Zon, S Robine, M Kruszewski, HB Dunford, A Hamaï, M Mehrpour, LJ Su, JH Zhang, H Gomez, R Murugan, X Hong, D Xu, S Doll, M Conrad, S Zalba, TL Ten Hagen, MP Wymann, R Schneiter, MM Gaschler, BR Stockwell, D Li, H Kuwata, S Hara, VE Kagan, G Mao, F Qu, JP Angeli, CS Croix, GE Winter, LS Musavi, ED Lee, B Snijder, M Rebsamen, P Vishnupriya, A Aparna, VP Viswanadha, WS Yang, KJ Kim, M Patel, MS Shchepinov, NK Singh, GN Rao, Y Zou, ET Graham, AA Deik, JK Eaton, W Wang, B Yan, Y Ai, Q Sun, Y Ma, Y Cao, H Lv, C Zhen, P Yang, L Hu, P Shang, J Lewerenz, SJ Hewett, Y Huang, M Lambros, PW Gout, PW Kalivas, H Sato, H Imai, M Matsuoka, T Kumagai, T Sakamoto, T Koumura, R SriRamaratnam, ME Welsch, K Shimada, VS Viswanathan, P Koppula, L Zhuang, B Gan, X Wang, Z Huang, Y Zhou, J Xia, W Hu, R Kong, N Wang, W Han, W Bao, J Lu, K Bersuker, JM Hendricks, Z Li, L Magtanong, B Ford, PH Tang, FP Freitas, R Shah, M Aldrovandi, MC da Silva, I Ingold, E Mishima, J Ito, Z Wu, A Wahida, C Mao, X Liu, Y Zhang, G Lei, Y Yan, H Lee, M Soula, RA Weber, O Zilka, H Alwaseem, K La, F Yen, VAN Kraft, CT Bezjian, S Pfeiffer, L Ringelstetter, C Müller, F Zandkarimi, J Vasquez-Vivar, Z Shi, S Tan, R Brigelius-Flohé, C Wang, Z Yang, Y Bai, T Shukuya, ME Poh, J Ni, K Chen, J Zhang, X Zhang, S Sui, L Zhang, S Xu, Z Wang, X Tian, Y Yang, L Ma, X Pan, Z Lin, D Jiang, Y Yu, D Yang, H Zhou, FJ Li, HZ Long, ZW Zhou, HY Luo, SG Xu, LC Gao, Z Fan, G Yang, W Zhang, Q Liu, G Liu, P Liu, L Feng, K Zhao, L Sun, X Yin, C Liu, M Chen, Y Jiang, Y Sun, X Wu, Z Sui, H Zhang, Y Wang, Z Yu, X Ji, J Qian, SMJ Rahman, PJ Siska, BK Harris, L Bai, L Zhi, Q Zhao, Y Chen, H Tian, J Jin, KR Zhang, YF Zhang, HM Lei, YB Tang, CS Ma, QM Lv, Y Xu, D Lv, C Yan, H Su, Y Shi, K Wang, J He, C Tu, H Xu, Y Lv, F He, L Antonucci, M Karin, E Panieri, L Saso, J Yang, Z Zhao, B Cao, S Yu, S Sajadimajd, M Khazaei, Z Ou, R Chen, X Niu, D Wu, J Duan, H Xiao, L Zhao, YP Kang, A Mockabee-Macias, C Jiang, A Falzone, N Prieto-Farigua, E Stone, W Liu, W Duan, J Song, S Wei, S Xia, H Wang, Q Huang, S Cheng, D Pei, B Proneth, YY Tyurina, E Panzilius, S Kobayashi, HL Zhang, BX Hu, ZL Li, T Du, JL Shan, ZP Ye, R Sha, C Yuan, X Sheng, J Peng, S Li, F Li, C Lv, QK Yang, H Wu, A Liu, J Hou, X Wen, C Li, S Xiong, T Yue, X Yang, X Hu, N Guo, YS Guan, Q He, Q Zou, L Yang, W Cui, Y Liu, QR Sun, L Jiang, N Kon, T Li, SJ Wang, T Su, H Hibshoosh, W Gu, G Kroemer, C Huang, M Yang, J Deng, P Li, W Su, R Jiang, W Yang, X He, Z Zhang, X Zheng, KR Marshall, M Gong, L Wodke, JH Lamb, DJ Jones, PB Farmer, L Kondiparthi, A Jo, JH Bae, YJ Yoon, TH Chung, EW Lee, YH Kim, JY Song, J Marszalek, EA Craig, EM Terzi, VO Sviderskiy, SW Alvarez, GC Whiten, R Possemato, T Papagiannakopoulos, AL Moreira, S Adams, KM Fujihara, BZ Zhang, TD Jackson, MO Ogunkola, B Nijagal, JV Milne, X Ye, C Ji, C Cheng, R Tang, J Xu, L Liu, XZ Yu, TS Li, LX Song, PL Chen, TL Suo, P Chen, WM Li, Q Lu, XL Yan, ZP Zhang, Z Ma, D Liu, W Li, S Di, Y Lai, L Ho, GR Crabtree, CR Clapier, J Iwasa, BR Cairns, CL Peterson, R Yang, N Liu, L Chen, JR Misra, KD Irvine, CG Hansen, YL Ng, WL Lam, SW Plouffe, KL Guan, PC Hsu, DM Jablons, CT Yang, L You, D Jin, J Guo, J Du, S Magesh, D Cai, K Yu, Z Qian, Y Miao, S Qiu, J Cui, D Glick, S Barth, KF Macleod, F Kuang, DJ Klionsky, E Park, SW Chung, B Zhou, JD Mancias, SP Gygi, JW Harper, AC Kimmelman, S Zhu, Q Wen, D Nandi, P Tahiliani, A Kumar, D Chandu, J Park, J Cho, EJ Song, Y Meng, H Sun, S Zhao, J Su, F Zeng, Q Yang, J Chen, L Yao, Z Tang, W Jiang, M Mao, J Zhao, N Cheng, C Meng, J Zhan, G Shao, D Huang, Q Li, Y Tang, Y Qu, M Esteller, Y He, X Jiang, L Duan, Q Xiong, Y Yuan, G Bi, J Liang, M Zhao, X Jin, T Lu, A Malhotra, PTB Ho, IM Clark, LTT Le, MA Iqbal, S Arora, G Prakasam, GA Calin, MA Syed, Z Song, G Jia, P Ma, S Cang, X Lu, N Kang, X Ling, M Pan, W Du, S Gao, D Wei, YQ Ke, P Duan, L Zhou, CY Wang, P Cao, Q Chen, Q Pan, H Gao, X Zhong, LS Kristensen, TB Hansen, MT Venø, J Kjems, G Shan, MS Andersen, LVW Stagsted, KK Ebbesen, FA Karreth, PP Pandolfi, Y Luo, Q Zhang, B Lv, Y Shang, O Li, J Kang, JJ Zhang, LW Hu, L Li, W Shanshan, M Hongying, F Jingjing, Y Yiming, R Yu, Y Rui, C Pan, K Wei, J Huang, Z Guo, Y Niu, X Xu, WX Peng, P Koirala, YY Mo, H Lu, S Wu, P Kim, X Zhou, J Yao, R Li, S Su, D Ye, W Lu, X Li, X Sui, N Hu, P Wang, G Xiu, M Wang, L Ouyang, W Lai, C Gai, M Yu, J Zheng, N Zhang, M Xu, T Chen, D Priem, G van Loo, MJM Bertrand, C Gao, F Xiao, Z Aburjania, S Jang, J Whitt, R Jaskula-Stzul, H Chen, JB Rose, J Xiao, M Liu, B Lian, N Vu, M Kim, D Stephenson, H MacKnight, C Chalfant, X Zeng, D Lu, M Yin, M Shan, Y Gao, S Liu, S Yan, J Zhu, R Lu, C Kang, K Tang, B Xu, Q Han, Y Xia, C Gong, AA Abdelgalil, HM Alkahtani, FI Al-Jenoobi, G Blumenschein, E Lachaier, C Louandre, C Godin, Z Saidak, M Baert, M Diouf, L Freire Boullosa, J Van Loenhout, T Flieswasser, J De Waele, C Hermans, H Lambrechts, W Zhou, M Yan, S Lian, K Sun, W Wu, Z Geng, H Bai, T Liu, B Zhang, H Yu, Z Han, Z Xu, C An, L Xu, H Xin, J Kryczka, KH Czarnecka-Chrebelska, E Brzeziańska-Lasota, L Galluzzi, L Senovilla, I Vitale, J Michels, I Martins, O Kepp, Z Liang, W Zhao, L Meng, Z Cui, C Abdel Shaheed, GE Ferreira, A Dmitritchenko, AJ McLachlan, RO Day, B Saragiotto, D Ding, J Laengle, J Kabiljo, L Hunter, J Homola, S Prodinger, G Egger, T Zhang, B Sun, C Zhong, K Xu, P Hofman, H Yan, H Liu, C Wu, LF Ye, KR Chaudhary, AD Harken, CJ Kinslow, PS Upadhyayula, CH Hsieh, HC Hsieh, FS Shih, PW Wang, LX Yang, DB Shieh, G Zhu, H Chi, Y Yin, H Diao, Z Liu, C Ge, S Zhang, H Mu, S Zheng, Z Tan, X Huang, US Neill, T Efferth, G Chen, F Benthani, D Liang, Z Bian, X Dai, W Chen, S Mo, H Yi, H Yao, L Lu, G He, M Wu, B Yuan, F Liao, Y Ren, X Deng, T Yang, N Han, X Peng, Q Ma, OA Ahmed Hamdi, SN Syed Abdul Rahman, K Awang, N Abdul Wahab, CY Looi, NF Thomas, R Zhang, T Pan, Y Xiang, M Zhang, H Xie, SW Ng, Y Chan, DK Chellappan, T Madheswaran, F Zeeshan, YL Chan, Y Fan, B Han, F Chen, S Alakurtti, T Mäkelä, S Koskimies, J Yli-Kauhaluoma, WY Yan, J Cai, JN Wang, YS Gong, XB Ding, KS Prabhu, AA Bhat, KS Siveen, S Kuttikrishnan, SS Raza, T Raheed, R Xu, J Tian, W Teng, D Boulghobra, PE Grillet, M Laguerre, M Tenon, J Fauconnier, P Fança-Berthon, M Shao, Q Jiang, C Shen, L Qiu, L Zhu, Y Lu, Z Sun, J Han, YY Zeng, YB Luo, XD Ju, YJ Cui, YB Pan, W Koch, W Kukula-Koch, Z Marzec, E Kasperek, L Wyszogrodzka-Koma, W Szwerc, Y Tsai, JC Merritt, SD Richbart, EG Moles, AJ Cox, KC Brown, SL Miles, K Srinivasan, XY Liu, DG Wei, RS Li, Q Wu, J Feng, L Yan, HQ Zhang, XF Xie, GM Li, JR Chen, MT Li, SL Morris-Natschke, KH Lee, CY Wu, YH Yang, YS Lin, GH Chang, MS Tsai, CM Hsu, S Chen, Y Guo, R Zhao, M Jiang, H Fu, UM Nazim, JK Jeong, SY Park, Q Gao, L Gu, A Gepdiremen, V Mshvildadze, H Süleyman, R Elias, D Wang, Y Lou, P Huang, M Jin, M Adnan, A Rasul, G Hussain, MA Shah, MK Zahoor, H Anwar, JS Lou, LP Zhao, ZH Huang, XY Chen, JT Xu, WC Tai, P Waiwut, A Inujima, H Inoue, I Saiki, H Sakurai, B Jiang, M Wan, A Vanduchova, P Anzenbacher, E Anzenbacherova, M Russo, C Spagnuolo, GL Russo, K Skalicka-Woźniak, M Daglia, E Sobarzo-Sánchez, Y Iida, M Okamoto-Katsuyama, S Maruoka, K Mizumura, T Shimizu, S Shikano, SM Lee, BS Bae, HW Park, NG Ahn, BG Cho, YL Cho, FG Zhai, QC Liang, YY Wu, JQ Liu, JW Liu, F Huang, J Pang, W Niu, YY Zhao, YQ Yang, HH Sheng, Q Tang, L Han, SM Wang, L Zeng, L Lignitto, SE LeBoeuf, H Homer, S Jiang, M Askenazi, TR Karakousi, M Yamamoto, TW Kensler, H Motohashi, W Cheng, M Guo, M Shen, D Kong, J Shao, C Liang, L Mahoney-Sánchez, H Bouchaoui, S Ayton, D Devos, JA Duce, JC Devedjian Show less
Lung cancer is a common malignant tumor that occurs in the human body and poses a serious threat to human health and quality of life. The existing treatment methods mainly include surgical treatment, Show more
Lung cancer is a common malignant tumor that occurs in the human body and poses a serious threat to human health and quality of life. The existing treatment methods mainly include surgical treatment, chemotherapy, and radiotherapy. However, due to the strong metastatic characteristics of lung cancer and the emergence of related drug resistance and radiation resistance, the overall survival rate of lung cancer patients is not ideal. There is an urgent need to develop new treatment strategies or new effective drugs to treat lung cancer. Ferroptosis, a novel type of programmed cell death, is different from the traditional cell death pathways such as apoptosis, necrosis, pyroptosis and so on. It is caused by the increase of iron-dependent reactive oxygen species due to intracellular iron overload, which leads to the accumulation of lipid peroxides, thus inducing cell membrane oxidative damage, affecting the normal life process of cells, and finally promoting the process of ferroptosis. The regulation of ferroptosis is closely related to the normal physiological process of cells, and it involves iron metabolism, lipid metabolism, and the balance between oxygen-free radical reaction and lipid peroxidation. A large number of studies have confirmed that ferroptosis is a result of the combined action of the cellular oxidation/antioxidant system and cell membrane damage/repair, which has great potential application in tumor therapy. Therefore, this review aims to explore potential therapeutic targets for ferroptosis in lung cancer by clarifying the regulatory pathway of ferroptosis. Based on the study of ferroptosis, the regulation mechanism of ferroptosis in lung cancer was understood and the existing chemical drugs and natural compounds targeting ferroptosis in lung cancer were summarized, with the aim of providing new ideas for the treatment of lung cancer. In addition, it also provides the basis for the discovery and clinical application of chemical drugs and natural compounds targeting ferroptosis to effectively treat lung cancer. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41420-023-01407-z
Fe ROS review
de Almeida PSVB, de Arruda HJ, Sousa GLS +7 more · 2021 · Dalton Transactions · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
Title: Cytotoxicity evaluation and DNA interaction of Ru Abstract: Although there are various treatment options for cancer, this disease still has caused an increasing number of deaths, demanding mor Show more
Title: Cytotoxicity evaluation and DNA interaction of Ru Abstract: Although there are various treatment options for cancer, this disease still has caused an increasing number of deaths, demanding more efficient, selective and less harmful drugs. Several classes of ruthenium compounds have been investigated as metallodrugs for cancer, mainly after the entry of imidazolH [trans-RuCl4-(DMSO-S)(imidazole)] (NAMI-A) and indazolH [trans-RuCl4-(Indazol)2] (KP1019) in clinical trials. In this sense, RuII complexes with general formula [Ru(L1-3)(bipy)2]PF6 (1-3) (L1 = ethyl 3-(6-methyl-2-oxo-2H-chromen-3-yl)-3-oxopropanoate, L2 = ethyl 3-(7-(diethylamino)-2-oxo-2H-chromen-3-yl)-3-oxopropanoate, L3 = ethyl 3-(8-methoxy-2-oxo-2H-chromen-3-yl)-3-oxopropanoate and bipy = bipyridine) have been synthesized. The crystal structure of 2 revealed that the RuII atom lies on a distorted octahedral geometry with the deprotonated ligand (L2-) coordinated through β-ketoester group oxygen atoms. In vitro cytotoxic activity of the compounds was evaluated against 4T1 (murine mammary carcinoma) and B16-F10 (murine metastatic melanoma) tumor cells, and the non-tumor cell line BHK-21 (baby hamster kidney). Coordination with RuII resulted in expressive enhancement of cytotoxic activity. The precursors were inactive below 100 μM and the final RuII complexes (1-3) showed IC50 ranging from 2.0 to 12.8 μM; 2 being the most potent compound. DNA interaction studies revealed a greater capacity of the complexes to interact with DNA than the ligands, where, 2 exhibited the highest Kb constant of 2.2 × 104 M-1. Fluorescence investigation demonstrated that 1-3 are capable of quenching the fluorescence emission of the EtdBr-DNA complex up to 40%. Molecular docking showed that the interaction of 1-3 between the DNA base pairs from the coumarin portion was with scores of 67.28, 68.62 and 64.88, respectively, and 75.45 for ellipticine, suggesting an intercalative mode of binding. Our findings show that the RuII complexes are eligible for continuing to be investigated as potential antitumor compounds. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/d1dt01567b
Biometal
Mariluz Soula, Ross A Weber, Omkar Zilka +7 more · 2020 · Nature chemical biology · Nature · added 2026-04-20
Cancer cells rewire their metabolism and rely on endogenous antioxidants to mitigate lethal oxidative damage to lipids. However, the metabolic processes that modulate the response to lipid peroxidatio Show more
Cancer cells rewire their metabolism and rely on endogenous antioxidants to mitigate lethal oxidative damage to lipids. However, the metabolic processes that modulate the response to lipid peroxidation are poorly defined. Using genetic screens, we compared metabolic genes essential for proliferation upon inhibition of cystine uptake or glutathione peroxidase-4 (GPX4). Interestingly, very few genes were commonly required under both conditions, suggesting that cystine limitation and GPX4 inhibition may impair proliferation via distinct mechanisms. Our screens also identify tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) biosynthesis as an essential metabolic pathway upon GPX4 inhibition. Mechanistically, BH4 is a potent radical-trapping antioxidant that protects lipid membranes from autoxidation, alone and in synergy with vitamin E. Dihydrofolate reductase catalyzes the regeneration of BH4, and its inhibition by methotrexate synergizes with GPX4 inhibition. Altogether, our work identifies the mechanism by which BH4 acts as an endogenous antioxidant and provides a compendium of metabolic modifiers of lipid peroxidation. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41589-020-0613-y
Fe
Hui S, Ghergurovich JM, Morscher RJ +8 more · 2018 · Nature · Nature · added 2026-04-20
Mammalian tissues are fuelled by circulating nutrients, including glucose, amino acids, and various intermediary metabolites. Under aerobic conditions, glucose is generally assumed to be burned fully Show more
Mammalian tissues are fuelled by circulating nutrients, including glucose, amino acids, and various intermediary metabolites. Under aerobic conditions, glucose is generally assumed to be burned fully by tissues via the tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA cycle) to carbon dioxide. Alternatively, glucose can be catabolized anaerobically via glycolysis to lactate, which is itself also a potential nutrient for tissues and tumours. The quantitative relevance of circulating lactate or other metabolic intermediates as fuels remains unclear. Here we systematically examine the fluxes of circulating metabolites in mice, and find that lactate can be a primary source of carbon for the TCA cycle and thus of energy. Intravenous infusions of 13C-labelled nutrients reveal that, on a molar basis, the circulatory turnover flux of lactate is the highest of all metabolites and exceeds that of glucose by 1.1-fold in fed mice and 2.5-fold in fasting mice; lactate is made primarily from glucose but also from other sources. In both fed and fasted mice, 13C-lactate extensively labels TCA cycle intermediates in all tissues. Quantitative analysis reveals that during the fasted state, the contribution of glucose to tissue TCA metabolism is primarily indirect (via circulating lactate) in all tissues except the brain. In genetically engineered lung and pancreatic cancer tumours in fasted mice, the contribution of circulating lactate to TCA cycle intermediates exceeds that of glucose, with glutamine making a larger contribution than lactate in pancreatic cancer. Thus, glycolysis and the TCA cycle are uncoupled at the level of lactate, which is a primary circulating TCA substrate in most tissues and tumours. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1038/nature24057
amino-acid
Brissos RF, Clavero P, Gallen A +8 more · 2018 · Inorganic Chemistry · ACS Publications · added 2026-05-01
In the present study, the potential anti-neoplastic properties of a series of ruthenium half-sandwich complexes of formula [Ru(η6-arene)Cl2(PR1R2(1-pyrenyl) Show more
In the present study, the potential anti-neoplastic properties of a series of ruthenium half-sandwich complexes of formula [Ru(η6-arene)Cl2(PR1R2(1-pyrenyl))] (η6-arene = p-cymene and R1 = R2 = methyl for 1; η6-arene = methylbenzoate and R1 = R2 = methyl for 2; η6-arene = p-cymene and R1 = R2 = phenyl for 3; η6-arene = methylbenzoate and R1 = R2 = phenyl for 4; η6-arene = p-cymene, R1 = methyl and R2 = phenyl for 5; η6-arene = methylbenzoate, R1 = methyl and R2 = phenyl for 6) have been investigated. The six structurally related organoruthenium(II) compounds have been prepared in good yields and fully characterized; the X-ray structures of three of them, i.e., 1, 2, and 4, were determined. Although the piano-stool compounds contain a large polycyclic aromatic moiety, viz. a 1-pyrenyl group, they do not appear to interact with DNA. However, all the piano-stool complexes show significant cytotoxic properties against five human cell lines, namely, lung adenocarcinoma (A549), melanoma (A375), colorectal adenocarcinoma (SW620), breast adenocarcinoma (MCF7), and nontumorigenic epithelial breast (MCF10A), with IC50 values in the micromolar range for most of them. In addition, the most active compound, i.e., 2, induces a remarkable decrease of cell viability, that is in the nanomolar range, against two human neuroblastoma cell lines, namely, SK-N-BE(2) and CHLA-90. Complexes 1-6 are all capable of inducing apoptosis, but with various degrees of magnitude. Whereas 1, 3, 5, and 6 have no effect on the cell cycle of A375 cells, 2 and 4 can arrest it at the G2/M phase; furthermore, 2 (which is the most efficient compound of the series) also stops the cycle at the S phase, behaving as the well-known anticancer agent cisplatin. Finally, 2 is able to inhibit/reduce the cell migration of neuroblastoma SK-N-BE(2) cells. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.8b02541
Biometal apoptosis
Leonidova A, Pierroz V, Adams LA +4 more · 2014 · ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters · ACS Publications · added 2026-05-01
Re(I) tricarbonyl polypyridine-based complexes are particularly attractive metal complexes in the field of inorganic chemical biology due to their luminescent properties, ease of conjugation to target Show more
Re(I) tricarbonyl polypyridine-based complexes are particularly attractive metal complexes in the field of inorganic chemical biology due to their luminescent properties, ease of conjugation to targeting biomolecules, and the possibility to prepare their "hot" (99m)Tc analogues for radioimaging. In this study, we prepared and characterized a novel, "clickable" complex, [Re(2,2'-bipyridine)(3-ethynylpyridine)(CO)3](BF4) ([Re(CO) 3 (bipy)(py-alkyne)](BF 4 )), exhibiting the characteristic luminescent properties and moderate cytotoxicity of this general class of compound. Using Cu(I)-catalyzed "click" chemistry, the complex was efficiently attached to a lipidated peptide known to increase cell permeability, namely, the myristoylated HIV-1 Tat peptide (myr-Tat), to give Re-myr-Tat. Fluorescence microscopy localization in human cervical cancer cells (HeLa) confirmed enhanced cellular uptake of Re-myr-Tat compared with [Re(CO) 3 (bipy)(py-alkyne)](BF 4 ), and cytotoxicity studies showed that this resulted in an increase in potency to a level comparable with cisplatin (13.0 ± 2.0 μM). Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1021/ml500158w
Biometal
Tummala R, Diegelman P, Fiuza SM +7 more · 2010 · Oncology Reports · added 2026-04-20
We have previously showed that platinum drugs up-regulate SSAT and SMO and down-regulate ODC and SAMDC in the polyamine pathway. Several studies including our own established that platinum drugs combi Show more
We have previously showed that platinum drugs up-regulate SSAT and SMO and down-regulate ODC and SAMDC in the polyamine pathway. Several studies including our own established that platinum drugs combined with polyamine analog DENSPM produces synergistic increase in SSAT activity with polyamine depletion. Since polyamine pathway is an important therapeutic target, we investigated whether agents containing both platinum and polyamines have similar effects on the polyamine pathway. Two complexes i) Pt-spermine with two cisplatin molecules linked to a spermine in the center and ii) Pd-spermine with similar structure i, but Pd (II) substituted for Pt (II) were analyzed with respect to their effect on the expression of genes in polyamine pathway, SSAT and SMO protein expression, SSAT activity and polyamine pools. Pt-, Pd-spermine complexes induced significant down-regulation of SMO, arginase 2 and NRF-2, with no change in SSAT, while cisplatin as a single agent or in combination with DENSPM induced significant up-regulation of SSAT and SMO. The SSAT activity was not induced by either Pt- or Pd-spermine in A2780 cells; SMO protein levels were significantly elevated compared to the no-drug control and to a similar extent as cisplatin/DENSPM. The Pd-spm treatment induced a fall in putrescine levels to 33%, spermidine to 62% and spermine to 72% while Pt-spm did not induce such a decline. Comparative cytotoxicity studies in A2780 cells indicated the potency to be cisplatin> Pd-Spm>Pt-Spm. Although both complexes exhibit a lower potency, the degree of resistance itself is much lower for Pt-spermine and Pd-spermine in that order (2.5 and 7.5, respectively) compared to cisplatin ( approximately 12) as tested in cisplatin resistant A2780/CP cells. These studies suggest that Pd (II)-polyamine complexes may constitute a promising group of inorganic compounds for further studies in the development of novel chemotherapy/adjuvant chemotherapy strategies. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3892/or_00000823
A2780 Pd Pt amino-acid anticancer
Silveira-Lacerda Ede P, Vilanova-Costa CA, Hamaguchi A +6 more · 2009 · Biological Trace Element Research · Springer · added 2026-05-01
The aim of present study was to verify the in vitro antitumor activity of a ruthenium complex, cis-(dichloro)tetraammineruthenium(III) chloride (cis-[RuCl(2)(NH(3))(4)]Cl) toward different tumor cell Show more
The aim of present study was to verify the in vitro antitumor activity of a ruthenium complex, cis-(dichloro)tetraammineruthenium(III) chloride (cis-[RuCl(2)(NH(3))(4)]Cl) toward different tumor cell lines. The antitumor studies showed that ruthenium(III) complex presents a relevant cytotoxic activity against murine B cell lymphoma (A-20), murine ascitic sarcoma 180 (S-180), human breast adenocarcinoma (SK-BR-3), and human T cell leukemia (Jurkat) cell lines and a very low cytotoxicity toward human peripheral blood mononuclear cells. The ruthenium(III) complex decreased the fraction of tumor cells in G0/G1 and/or G2-M phases, indicating that this compound may act on resting/early entering G0/G1 cells and/or precycling G2-M cells. The cytotoxic activity of a high concentration (2 mg mL(-1)) of cis-[RuCl(2)(NH(3))(4)]Cl toward Jurkat cells correlated with an increased number of annexin V-positive cells and also the presence of DNA fragmentation, suggesting that this compound induces apoptosis in tumor cells. The development of new antineoplastic medications demands adequate knowledge in order to avoid inefficient or toxic treatments. Thus, a mechanistic understanding of how metal complexes achieve their activities is crucial to their clinical success and to the rational design of new compounds with improved potency. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s12011-009-8498-3
Biometal