4.6 Review

Vanadium in cancer treatment

Journal

CRITICAL REVIEWS IN ONCOLOGY HEMATOLOGY
Volume 42, Issue 3, Pages 249-265

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/S1040-8428(01)00221-9

Keywords

vanadium; biochemistry; anticancer effects; apoptosis; free radicals; metastasis; toxicity; drug resistance

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Vanadium compounds exert preventive effects against chemical carcinogenesis on animals, by modifying, mainly, various xenobiotic enzymes, inhibiting, thus, carcinogen-derived active metabolites. Studies on various cell lines reveal that vanadium exerts its antitumor effects through inhibition of cellular tyrosine phosphatases and/or activation of tyrosine phosphorylases. Both effects activate signal transduction pathways leading either to apoptosis and/or to activation of tumor suppressor genes. Furthermore, vanadium compounds may induce cell-cycle arrest and/or cytotoxic effects through DNA cleavage and fragmentation and plasma membrane lipoperoxidation. Reactive oxygen species generated by Fenton-like reactions and/or during the intracellular reduction of V(V) to V(IV) by, mainly, NADPH, participate to the majority of the vanadium-induced intracellular events. Vanadium may also exert inhibitory effects on cancer cell metastatic potential through modulation of cellular adhesive molecules, and reverse antineoplastic drug resistance. It also possesses low toxicity that, in combination with the synthesis of new, more potent and better tolerated complexes, may establish vanadium as an effective non-platinum, metal antitumor agent. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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