Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1907957 Free Radical Biology and Medicine 2015 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Diazeniumdiolate-based aspirin prodrugs reduced growth of breast cancer.•The HNO donor also was more cytotoxic than the related NO donor.•Cytotoxicity was significantly lower in endothelial cells, indicating cancer specificity.•The antiproliferative and antimetastatic mechanisms were unique for HNO and NO.

Diazeniumdiolate-based aspirin prodrugs have previously been shown to retain the anti-inflammatory properties of aspirin while protecting against the common side effect of stomach ulceration. Initial analysis of two new prodrugs of aspirin that also release either nitroxyl (HNO) or nitric oxide (NO) demonstrated increased cytotoxicity toward human lung carcinoma cells compared to either aspirin or the parent nitrogen oxide donor. In addition, cytotoxicity was significantly lower in endothelial cells, suggesting cancer-specific sensitivity. To assess the chemotherapeutic potential of these new prodrugs in treatment of breast cancer, we studied their effect both in cultured cells and in a nude mouse model. Both prodrugs reduced growth of breast adenocarcinoma cells more effectively than the parent compounds while not being appreciably cytotoxic in a related nontumorigenic cell line (MCF-10A). The HNO donor also was more cytotoxic than the related NO donor. The basis for the observed specificity was investigated in terms of impact on metabolism, DNA damage and repair, apoptosis, angiogenesis and metastasis. The results suggest a significant pharmacological potential for treatment of breast cancer.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Ageing
Authors
, , , , , ,