Blockade of Notch Signaling by GSI Induces Apoptosis in Human Breast Cancer Cells through Various Molecular Mechanisms Involving Survivin and BH3-Only Members of the Bcl-2 Family.

Author(s):  
C. Séveno ◽  
M. Campone ◽  
M. Campone ◽  
P. Juin ◽  
S. Barillé-Nion
2017 ◽  
Vol 65 (6) ◽  
pp. 1122-1135.e5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua D. Stender ◽  
Jerome C. Nwachukwu ◽  
Irida Kastrati ◽  
Yohan Kim ◽  
Tobias Strid ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ancély F. dos Santos ◽  
Alex Inague ◽  
Gabriel S. Arini ◽  
Letícia F. Terra ◽  
Rosangela A.M. Wailemann ◽  
...  

AbstractLack of effective treatments for aggressive breast cancer is still a major global health problem. We previously reported that Photodynamic Therapy using Methylene Blue as photosensitizer (MB-PDT) massively kills metastatic human breast cancer, marginally affecting healthy cells. In this study we aimed to unveil the molecular mechanisms behind MB-PDT effectiveness. Through lipidomic and biochemical approaches we demonstrated that MB-PDT efficiency and specificity relies on polyunsaturated fatty acids-enriched membranes and on the better capacity to deal with photooxidative damage displayed by non-tumorigenic cells. We found out that, in tumorigenic cells, lysosome membrane permeabilization is accompanied by ferroptosis and/or necroptosis. Our results broadened the understanding of MB-PDT-induced photooxidation mechanisms and specificity in breast cancer cells. Therefore, we demonstrated that efficient approaches could be designed on the basis of lipid composition and metabolic features for hard-to-treat cancers. The results further reinforce MB-PDT as a therapeutic strategy for highly aggressive human breast cancer cells.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ancély F. Dos Santos ◽  
Alex Inague ◽  
Gabriel S. Arini ◽  
Letícia F. Terra ◽  
Rosangela A. M. Wailemann ◽  
...  

AbstractLack of effective treatments for aggressive breast cancer is still a major global health problem. We have previously reported that photodynamic therapy using methylene blue as photosensitizer (MB-PDT) massively kills metastatic human breast cancer, marginally affecting healthy cells. In this study, we aimed to unveil the molecular mechanisms behind MB-PDT effectiveness and specificity towards tumor cells. Through lipidomics and biochemical approaches, we demonstrated that MB-PDT efficiency and specificity rely on polyunsaturated fatty acid-enriched membranes and on the better capacity to deal with photo-oxidative damage displayed by non-tumorigenic cells. We found out that, in tumorigenic cells, lysosome membrane permeabilization is accompanied by ferroptosis and/or necroptosis. Our results also pointed at a cross-talk between lysosome-dependent cell death (LDCD) and necroptosis induction after photo-oxidation, and contributed to broaden the understanding of MB-PDT-induced mechanisms and specificity in breast cancer cells. Therefore, we demonstrated that efficient approaches could be designed on the basis of lipid composition and metabolic features for hard-to-treat cancers. The results further reinforce MB-PDT as a therapeutic strategy for highly aggressive human breast cancer cells.


Author(s):  
Philippa D. Darbre

AbstractGrowth responses to oestrogen can be reproducibly obtained using a selection of oestrogen-receptor-containing human breast cancer cell lines, and molecular mechanisms have been shown to include modulation to growth factor/receptor/signalling pathways, cell-cycle proteins, apoptosis, differentiation, adhesion, motility and migration. Considerable progress has been made in understanding the molecular basis of oestrogen action on gene expression through the ligand-activated transcription factors human oestrogen receptor α (ERα) and ERβ and the resulting effects on global gene expression patterns, but the full profile of coordination of the alterations, which brings about changes in cell growth through genomic and non-genomic mechanisms remain to be fully elucidated. Oestrogen regulation of cell growth involves a complex cross-talk between oestrogen receptor and growth factor signalling pathways such that inhibition of one pathway may lead to stimulation of another, which may explain the remarkable ability of human breast cancer cells to escape from any mode of imposed growth inhibition be it oestrogen deprivation or administration of antioestrogen. Although studies on cell growth have focused to date on the effects of physiological oestrogens, many hundreds of environmental chemicals with oestrogenic properties have now been measured in the human breast. Whether or not the weight of evidence eventually establishes any causal link of complex mixtures of environmental oestrogenic chemicals with breast cancer, the presence of so many oestrogenic chemicals in the breast must influence resulting oestrogenic responses, and the impact of this additional oestrogenic burden needs to be taken into account in future studies on growth regulation of human breast cancer cells.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexey Leontovich ◽  
Jeffrey Salisbury ◽  
Candace L. Haddox ◽  
Lisa Mills ◽  
Tufia Haddad ◽  
...  

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