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1.
Int J Mol Sci ; 23(5)2022 Feb 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35269597

RESUMO

The pH-related metabolic paradigm has rapidly grown in cancer research and treatment. In this contribution, this recent oncological perspective has been laterally assessed for the first time in order to integrate neurodegeneration within the energetics of the cancer acid-base conceptual frame. At all levels of study (molecular, biochemical, metabolic, and clinical), the intimate nature of both processes appears to consist of opposite mechanisms occurring at the far ends of a physiopathological intracellular pH/extracellular pH (pHi/pHe) spectrum. This wide-ranging original approach now permits an increase in our understanding of these opposite processes, cancer and neurodegeneration, and, as a consequence, allows us to propose new avenues of treatment based upon the intracellular and microenvironmental hydrogen ion dynamics regulating and deregulating the biochemistry and metabolism of both cancer and neural cells. Under the same perspective, the etiopathogenesis and special characteristics of multiple sclerosis (MS) is an excellent model for the study of neurodegenerative diseases and, utilizing this pioneering approach, we find that MS appears to be a metabolic disease even before an autoimmune one. Furthermore, within this paradigm, several important aspects of MS, from mitochondrial failure to microbiota functional abnormalities, are analyzed in depth. Finally, and for the first time, a new and integrated model of treatment for MS can now be advanced.


Assuntos
Esclerose Múltipla , Neoplasias , Doenças Neurodegenerativas , Humanos , Mitocôndrias/metabolismo , Esclerose Múltipla/patologia , Doenças Neurodegenerativas/metabolismo , Prótons
2.
J Enzyme Inhib Med Chem ; 36(1): 1258-1267, 2021 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34107824

RESUMO

COVID-19, a pandemic disease caused by a viral infection, is associated with a high mortality rate. Most of the signs and symptoms, e.g. cytokine storm, electrolytes imbalances, thromboembolism, etc., are related to mitochondrial dysfunction. Therefore, targeting mitochondrion will represent a more rational treatment of COVID-19. The current work outlines how COVID-19's signs and symptoms are related to the mitochondrion. Proper understanding of the underlying causes might enhance the opportunity to treat COVID-19.


Assuntos
Tratamento Farmacológico da COVID-19 , COVID-19/patologia , Mitocôndrias/efeitos dos fármacos , Mitocôndrias/patologia , Antivirais/química , Antivirais/farmacologia , COVID-19/metabolismo , Humanos , Mitocôndrias/metabolismo , SARS-CoV-2/efeitos dos fármacos , SARS-CoV-2/patogenicidade
3.
Int J Mol Sci ; 21(20)2020 Oct 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33050492

RESUMO

A brand new approach to the understanding of breast cancer (BC) is urgently needed. In this contribution, the etiology, pathogenesis, and treatment of this disease is approached from the new pH-centric anticancer paradigm. Only this unitarian perspective, based upon the hydrogen ion (H+) dynamics of cancer, allows for the understanding and integration of the many dualisms, confusions, and paradoxes of the disease. The new H+-related, wide-ranging model can embrace, from a unique perspective, the many aspects of the disease and, at the same time, therapeutically interfere with most, if not all, of the hallmarks of cancer known to date. The pH-related armamentarium available for the treatment of BC reviewed here may be beneficial for all types and stages of the disease. In this vein, we have attempted a megasynthesis of traditional and new knowledge in the different areas of breast cancer research and treatment based upon the wide-ranging approach afforded by the hydrogen ion dynamics of cancer. The concerted utilization of the pH-related drugs that are available nowadays for the treatment of breast cancer is advanced.


Assuntos
Neoplasias da Mama/metabolismo , Hidrogênio/metabolismo , Prótons , Animais , Antineoplásicos , Biomarcadores Tumorais , Neoplasias da Mama/diagnóstico , Neoplasias da Mama/tratamento farmacológico , Neoplasias da Mama/etiologia , Proteínas de Transporte de Cátions/antagonistas & inibidores , Proteínas de Transporte de Cátions/metabolismo , Respiração Celular/efeitos dos fármacos , Estudos Clínicos como Assunto , Terapia Combinada , Gerenciamento Clínico , Resistencia a Medicamentos Antineoplásicos , Feminino , Humanos , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Espaço Intracelular , Terapia de Alvo Molecular , Inibidores da Bomba de Prótons/farmacologia , Inibidores da Bomba de Prótons/uso terapêutico , Bombas de Próton/metabolismo , Trocadores de Sódio-Hidrogênio/metabolismo , Pesquisa Translacional Biomédica , Resultado do Tratamento , Microambiente Tumoral
4.
Int J Mol Sci ; 21(3)2020 Feb 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32046158

RESUMO

Despite all efforts, the treatment of breast cancer (BC) cannot be considered to be a success story. The advances in surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy have not been sufficient at all. Indeed, the accumulated experience clearly indicates that new perspectives and non-main stream approaches are needed to better characterize the etiopathogenesis and treatment of this disease. This contribution deals with how the new pH-centric anticancer paradigm plays a fundamental role in reaching a more integral understanding of the etiology, pathogenesis, and treatment of this multifactorial disease. For the first time, the armamentarium available for the treatment of the different types and phases of BC is approached here from a Unitarian perspective-based upon the hydrogen ion dynamics of cancer. The wide-ranged pH-related molecular, biochemical and metabolic model is able to embrace most of the fields and subfields of breast cancer etiopathogenesis and treatment. This single and integrated approach allows advancing towards a unidirectional, concerted and synergistic program of treatment. Further efforts in this line are likely to first improve the therapeutics of each subtype of this tumor and every individual patient in every phase of the disease.


Assuntos
Antineoplásicos/uso terapêutico , Neoplasias da Mama/metabolismo , Inibidores da Bomba de Prótons/uso terapêutico , Prótons , Animais , Neoplasias da Mama/tratamento farmacológico , Resistencia a Medicamentos Antineoplásicos , Feminino , Humanos , Bombas de Próton/metabolismo , Microambiente Tumoral
5.
Int J Mol Sci ; 20(17)2019 Sep 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31480530

RESUMO

The treatment of cancer has been slowly but steadily progressing during the last fifty years. Some tumors with a high mortality in the past are curable nowadays. However, there is one striking exception: glioblastoma multiforme. No real breakthrough has been hitherto achieved with this tumor with ominous prognosis and very short survival. Glioblastomas, being highly glycolytic malignancies are strongly pH-dependent and driven by the sodium hydrogen exchanger 1 (NHE1) and other proton (H+) transporters. Therefore, this is one of those pathologies where the lessons recently learnt from the new pH-centered anticancer paradigm may soon bring a promising change to treatment. This contribution will discuss how the pH-centric molecular, biochemical and metabolic perspective may introduce some urgently needed and integral novel treatments. Such a prospective therapeutic approach for malignant brain tumors is developed here, either to be used alone or in combination with more standard therapies.


Assuntos
Neoplasias Encefálicas/metabolismo , Glioblastoma/metabolismo , Prótons , Animais , Glicólise , Humanos , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Trocador 1 de Sódio-Hidrogênio/metabolismo
6.
Semin Cancer Biol ; 43: 157-179, 2017 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28193528

RESUMO

During the last few years, the understanding of the dysregulated hydrogen ion dynamics and reversed proton gradient of cancer cells has resulted in a new and integral pH-centric paradigm in oncology, a translational model embracing from cancer etiopathogenesis to treatment. The abnormalities of intracellular alkalinization along with extracellular acidification of all types of solid tumors and leukemic cells have never been described in any other disease and now appear to be a specific hallmark of malignancy. As a consequence of this intracellular acid-base homeostatic failure, the attempt to induce cellular acidification using proton transport inhibitors and other intracellular acidifiers of different origins is becoming a new therapeutic concept and selective target of cancer treatment, both as a metabolic mediator of apoptosis and in the overcoming of multiple drug resistance (MDR). Importantly, there is increasing data showing that different ion channels contribute to mediate significant aspects of cancer pH regulation and etiopathogenesis. Finally, we discuss the extension of this new pH-centric oncological paradigm into the opposite metabolic and homeostatic acid-base situation found in human neurodegenerative diseases (HNDDs), which opens novel concepts in the prevention and treatment of HNDDs through the utilization of a cohort of neural and non-neural derived hormones and human growth factors.


Assuntos
Ácidos/metabolismo , Doenças Neurodegenerativas/terapia , Apoptose , Humanos , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Doenças Neurodegenerativas/metabolismo
7.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1848(10 Pt B): 2715-26, 2015 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25449995

RESUMO

Although cancer is characterized by an intratumoral genetic heterogeneity, a totally deranged pH control is a common feature of most cancer histotypes. Major determinants of aberrant pH gradient in cancer are proton exchangers and transporters, including V-ATPase, Na+/H+ exchanger (NHE), monocarboxylate transporters (MCTs) and carbonic anhydrases (CAs). Thanks to the activity of these proton transporters and exchangers, cancer becomes isolated and/or protected not only from the body reaction against the growing tumor, but also from the vast majority of drugs that when protonated into the acidic tumor microenvironment do not enter into cancer cells. Proton transporters and exchangers represent a key feature tumor cells use to survive in the very hostile microenvironmental conditions that they create and maintain. Detoxifying mechanisms may thus represent both a key survival option and a selection outcome for cells that behave as unicellular microorganisms rather than belonging to an organ, compartment or body. It is, in fact, typical of malignant tumors that, after a clinically measurable yet transient initial response to a therapy, resistant tumor clones emerge and proliferate, thus bursting a more malignant behavior and rapid tumor progression. This review critically presents the background of a novel and efficient approach that aims to fight cancer through blocking or inhibiting well characterized proton exchangers and transporters active in human cancer cells. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Membrane channels and transporters in cancers.


Assuntos
Antineoplásicos/uso terapêutico , Regulação Neoplásica da Expressão Gênica , Neoplasias/metabolismo , Inibidores da Bomba de Prótons/uso terapêutico , Prótons , Animais , Anidrases Carbônicas/genética , Anidrases Carbônicas/metabolismo , Resistencia a Medicamentos Antineoplásicos/efeitos dos fármacos , Resistencia a Medicamentos Antineoplásicos/genética , Humanos , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Transportadores de Ácidos Monocarboxílicos/antagonistas & inibidores , Transportadores de Ácidos Monocarboxílicos/genética , Transportadores de Ácidos Monocarboxílicos/metabolismo , Neoplasias/tratamento farmacológico , Neoplasias/genética , Neoplasias/patologia , Trocadores de Sódio-Hidrogênio/antagonistas & inibidores , Trocadores de Sódio-Hidrogênio/genética , Trocadores de Sódio-Hidrogênio/metabolismo , Microambiente Tumoral/efeitos dos fármacos , ATPases Vacuolares Próton-Translocadoras/antagonistas & inibidores , ATPases Vacuolares Próton-Translocadoras/genética , ATPases Vacuolares Próton-Translocadoras/metabolismo
8.
Cancer Cell Int ; 15: 71, 2015.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26180516

RESUMO

Cancer chemotherapy resistance (MDR) is the innate and/or acquired ability of cancer cells to evade the effects of chemotherapeutics and is one of the most pressing major dilemmas in cancer therapy. Chemotherapy resistance can arise due to several host or tumor-related factors. However, most current research is focused on tumor-specific factors and specifically genes that handle expression of pumps that efflux accumulated drugs inside malignantly transformed types of cells. In this work, we suggest a wider and alternative perspective that sets the stage for a future platform in modifying drug resistance with respect to the treatment of cancer.

9.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1832(5): 606-17, 2013 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23376112

RESUMO

With a projected 382.4 per 100,000 people expected to suffer from some form of malignant neoplasm in 2015, improving treatment is an essential focus of cancer research today. Multi-drug resistance (MDR) is the leading cause of chemotherapeutic failure in the treatment of cancer, the term denoting a characteristic of the disease-causing agent to avoid damage by drugs designed to bring about their destruction. MDR is also characterised by a reversal of the pH gradient across cell membranes leading to an acidification of the outer milieu and an alkalinisation of the cytosol that is maintained by the proton pump vacuolar-type ATPase (V-ATPase) and the proton transporters: Na(+)/H(+) exchanger (NHE1), Monocarboxylate Transporters (MCTs), Carbonic anhydrases (CAs) (mainly CA-IX), adenosinetriphosphate synthase, Na(+)/HCO3(-) co-transporter and the Cl(-)/HCO3(-)exchanger. This review aims to give an introduction to MDR. It will begin with an explanation for what MDR actually is and go on to look at the proposed mechanisms by which a state of drug resistance is achieved. The role of proton-pumps in creating an acidic extracellular pH and alkaline cytosol, as well as key biomechanical processes within the cell membrane itself, will be used to explain how drug resistance can be sustained.


Assuntos
Resistência a Múltiplos Medicamentos , Resistencia a Medicamentos Antineoplásicos , Neoplasias/tratamento farmacológico , Prótons , Humanos , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Modelos Biológicos , Neoplasias/metabolismo , Bombas de Próton/metabolismo , Trocadores de Sódio-Hidrogênio/metabolismo
11.
J Transl Med ; 11: 282, 2013 Nov 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24195657

RESUMO

In recent years an increasing number of publications have emphasized the growing importance of hydrogen ion dynamics in modern cancer research, from etiopathogenesis and treatment. A proton [H+]-related mechanism underlying the initiation and progression of the neoplastic process has been recently described by different research groups as a new paradigm in which all cancer cells and tissues, regardless of their origin and genetic background, have a pivotal energetic and homeostatic disturbance of their metabolism that is completely different from all normal tissues: an aberrant regulation of hydrogen ion dynamics leading to a reversal of the pH gradient in cancer cells and tissues (↑pHi/↓pHe, or "proton reversal"). Tumor cells survive their hostile microenvironment due to membrane-bound proton pumps and transporters, and their main defensive strategy is to never allow internal acidification because that could lead to their death through apoptosis. In this context, one of the primary and best studied regulators of both pHi and pHe in tumors is the Na+/H+ exchanger isoform 1 (NHE1). An elevated NHE1 activity can be correlated with both an increase in cell pH and a decrease in the extracellular pH of tumors, and such proton reversal is associated with the origin, local growth, activation and further progression of the metastatic process. Consequently, NHE1 pharmaceutical inhibition by new and potent NHE1 inhibitors represents a potential and highly selective target in anticancer therapy. Cariporide, being one of the better studied specific and powerful NHE1 inhibitors, has proven to be well tolerated by humans in the cardiological context, however some side-effects, mainly related to drug accumulation and cerebrovascular complications were reported. Thus, cariporide could become a new, slightly toxic and effective anticancer agent in different human malignancies.


Assuntos
Proteínas de Transporte de Cátions/antagonistas & inibidores , Guanidinas/farmacologia , Neoplasias/tratamento farmacológico , Trocadores de Sódio-Hidrogênio/antagonistas & inibidores , Sulfonas/farmacologia , Antineoplásicos/farmacologia , Antineoplásicos/uso terapêutico , Guanidinas/uso terapêutico , Humanos , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Neoplasias/imunologia , Neoplasias/metabolismo , Trocador 1 de Sódio-Hidrogênio , Sulfonas/uso terapêutico
12.
Cancers (Basel) ; 15(2)2023 Jan 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36672490

RESUMO

Back to beginnings. A century ago, Otto Warburg published that aerobic glycolysis and the respiratory impairment of cells were the prime cause of cancer, a phenomenon that since then has been known as "the Warburg effect". In his early studies, Warburg looked at the effects of hydrogen ions (H+), on glycolysis in anaerobic conditions, as well as of bicarbonate and glucose. He found that gassing with CO2 led to the acidification of the solutions, resulting in decreased rates of glycolysis. It appears that Warburg first interpreted the role of pH on glycolysis as a secondary phenomenon, a side effect that was there just to compensate for the effect of bicarbonate. However, later on, while talking about glycolysis in a seminar at the Rockefeller Foundation, he said: "Special attention should be drawn to the remarkable influence of the bicarbonate…". Departing from the very beginnings of this metabolic cancer research in the 1920s, our perspective advances an analytic as well as the synthetic approach to the new "pH-related paradigm of cancer", while at the same time addressing the most fundamental and recent changing concepts in cancer metabolic etiology and its potential therapeutic implications.

13.
J Transl Med ; 8: 57, 2010 Jun 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20550689

RESUMO

Cancer remains a leading cause of death in the world today. Despite decades of research to identify novel therapeutic approaches, durable regressions of metastatic disease are still scanty and survival benefits often negligible. While the current strategy is mostly converging on target-therapies aimed at selectively affecting altered molecular pathways in tumor cells, evidences are in parallel pointing to cell metabolism as a potential Achilles' heel of cancer, to be disrupted for achieving therapeutic benefit. Critical differences in the metabolism of tumor versus normal cells, which include abnormal glycolysis, high lactic acid production, protons accumulation and reversed intra-extracellular pH gradients, make tumor site a hostile microenvironment where only cancer cells can proliferate and survive. Inhibiting these pathways by blocking proton pumps and transporters may deprive cancer cells of a key mechanism of detoxification and thus represent a novel strategy for a pleiotropic and multifaceted suppression of cancer cell growth.Research groups scattered all over the world have recently started to investigate various aspects of proton dynamics in cancer cells with quite encouraging preliminary results. The intent of unifying investigators involved in this research line led to the formation of the "International Society for Proton Dynamics in Cancer" (ISPDC) in January 2010. This is the manifesto of the newly formed society where both basic and clinical investigators are called to foster translational research and stimulate interdisciplinary collaboration for the development of more specific and less toxic therapeutic strategies based on proton dynamics in tumor cell biology.


Assuntos
Neoplasias/metabolismo , Prótons , Animais , Glucose/metabolismo , Humanos , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Neoplasias/diagnóstico por imagem , Neoplasias/patologia , Neoplasias/terapia , Bombas de Próton/metabolismo , Cintilografia
14.
Metabolites ; 10(7)2020 Jul 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32664469

RESUMO

The Pentose Phosphate Pathway (PPP) is one of the key metabolic pathways occurring in living cells to produce energy and maintain cellular homeostasis. Cancer cells have higher cytoplasmic utilization of glucose (glycolysis), even in the presence of oxygen; this is known as the "Warburg Effect". However, cytoplasmic glucose utilization can also occur in cancer through the PPP. This pathway contributes to cancer cells by operating in many different ways: (i) as a defense mechanism via the reduced form of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) to prevent apoptosis, (ii) as a provision for the maintenance of energy by intermediate glycolysis, (iii) by increasing genomic material to the cellular pool of nucleic acid bases, (iv) by promoting survival through increasing glycolysis, and so increasing acid production, and (v) by inducing cellular proliferation by the synthesis of nucleic acid, fatty acid, and amino acid. Each step of the PPP can be upregulated in some types of cancer but not in others. An interesting aspect of this metabolic pathway is the shared regulation of the glycolytic and PPP pathways by intracellular pH (pHi). Indeed, as with glycolysis, the optimum activity of the enzymes driving the PPP occurs at an alkaline pHi, which is compatible with the cytoplasmic pH of cancer cells. Here, we outline each step of the PPP and discuss its possible correlation with cancer.

15.
Cancers (Basel) ; 12(4)2020 Apr 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32272658

RESUMO

Cancer cells and tissues have an aberrant regulation of hydrogen ion dynamics driven by a combination of poor vascular perfusion, regional hypoxia, and increased the flux of carbons through fermentative glycolysis. This leads to extracellular acidosis and intracellular alkalinization. Dysregulated pH dynamics influence cancer cell biology, from cell transformation and tumorigenesis to proliferation, local growth, invasion, and metastasis. Moreover, this dysregulated intracellular pH (pHi) drives a metabolic shift to increased aerobic glycolysis and reduced mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation, referred to as the Warburg effect, or Warburg metabolism, which is a selective feature of cancer. This metabolic reprogramming confers a thermodynamic advantage on cancer cells and tissues by protecting them against oxidative stress, enhancing their resistance to hypoxia, and allowing a rapid conversion of nutrients into biomass to enable cell proliferation. Indeed, most cancers have increased glucose uptake and lactic acid production. Furthermore, cancer cells have very dysregulated electrolyte balances, and in the interaction of the pH dynamics with electrolyte, dynamics is less well known. In this review, we highlight the interconnected roles of dysregulated pH dynamics and electrolytes imbalance in cancer initiation, progression, adaptation, and in determining the programming and reprogramming of tumor cell metabolism.

16.
Anticancer Res ; 29(6): 2127-36, 2009 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19528473

RESUMO

Different research groups have recently described a proton [H(+)]-related mechanism underlying the initiation and progression of the neoplastic process in which all cancer cells and tissues, regardless of their origin and genetic background, have a pivotal energetic and homeostatic disturbance of their metabolism that is completely different from all normal tissues: an aberrant regulation of hydrogen ion dynamics leading to a reversal of the pH gradient in cancer cells and tissues (pH(i) to pH(e)) as compared to normal tissue pH gradients. This basic specific abnormality of the relationship between the intracellular and the extracellular proton dynamics, a phenomenon that is increasingly considered to be one of the most differential hallmarks of cancer, has led to the formation of a unifying thermodynamic view of cancer research that embraces cancer fields from etiopathogenesis, cancer cell metabolism, multiple drug resistance (MDR), neovascularization and the metastatatic process to selective apoptosis, cancer chemotherapy and even the spontaneous regression of cancer (SRC). This reversed proton gradient is driven by a series of proton export mechanisms that underlie the initiation and progression of the neoplastic process. This means that therapeutic targeting of the transporters that are active in cancer cells could be selective for malignancy and is likely to open new pathways towards the development of more effective and less toxic therapeutic measures for all malignant diseases. Here we review the transporters involved in driving the reversed proton gradient and their specific inhibitors.


Assuntos
Antineoplásicos/uso terapêutico , Neoplasias/tratamento farmacológico , Inibidores da Bomba de Prótons , Animais , Humanos , ATPases Vacuolares Próton-Translocadoras/antagonistas & inibidores
17.
Front Oncol ; 9: 75, 2019.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30854333

RESUMO

Helicobacter pylori (HP) is a facultative anaerobic bacterium. HP is a normal flora having immuno-modulating properties. This bacterium is an example of a microorganism inducing gastric cancer. Its carcinogenicity depends on bacteria-host related factors. The proper understanding of the biology of HP inducing gastric cancer offers the potential strategy in the managing of HP rather than eradicating it. In this article, we try to summarize the biology of HP-induced gastric cancer and discuss the current pharmacological approach to treat and prevent its carcinogenicity.

18.
Curr Alzheimer Res ; 4(1): 53-65, 2007 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17316166

RESUMO

Abnormalities in the intricate intracellular signalling pathways play a key role in the deregulation of either spontaneous (normal or pathological) or induced (therapeutic) cell death mechanisms. Some of these pathways are increasingly becoming molecular therapeutic targets in different processes, ranging from neurodegenerative diseases to cancer. Recent discoveries in research and treatment have shown that failure to induce selective cell apoptosis in hyperproliferative processes, like neoplastic diseases, and the failure to prevent spontaneous cell death in neurodegenerative diseases (HNDDs) such as Alzheimer's disease (AD), multiple sclerosis (MS), amyothrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Huntington's disease (HD), and retinitis pigmentosa (RP), can be interpreted as problems stemming from the same basic mechanisms but moving in diametrically opposed directions. The integrated approach advanced here represents an interdisciplinary attempt to stimulate an integrated vision of two otherwise widely separated areas of research, experimental neurology and oncology. This kind of approach to the prevention of apoptosis (therapeutic antiapoptosis) and/or other forms of cell death in HNNDs, as well as to resistance to therapeutic apoptosis in cancer (pathological antiapoptosis), has the scope to improve the understanding of the dualistic nature of the basic abnormalities underlying the pathological deregulation of cell death. In this context, an intracellular pH (pH(i))-related approach to these opposed situations is advanced to provide a unified theory of the apoptosis-antiapoptosis machinery. Some potential therapeutic possibilities opened by these lines of research, regarding the utilization of human growth factors and/or cellular anti-acidification measures directed to sustain cellular acid-base homeostasis in different HNNDs are considered because of their potential therapeutic benefit. Finally, we advance some possible dangers and side-effects raised by these very same treatment efforts.


Assuntos
Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Peptídeos e Proteínas de Sinalização Intercelular/metabolismo , Neoplasias/metabolismo , Doenças Neurodegenerativas/metabolismo , Trocadores de Sódio-Hidrogênio/metabolismo , Animais , Apoptose/efeitos dos fármacos , Humanos , Peptídeos e Proteínas de Sinalização Intercelular/uso terapêutico , Modelos Biológicos , Neoplasias/fisiopatologia , Doenças Neurodegenerativas/tratamento farmacológico , Doenças Neurodegenerativas/fisiopatologia
19.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1756(1): 1-24, 2005 Sep 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16099110

RESUMO

Looked at from the genetic point-of-view cancer represents a daunting and, frankly, confusing multiplicity of diseases (at least 100) that require an equally large variety of therapeutic strategies and substances designed to treat the particular tumor. However, when analyzed phenotypically cancer is a relatively uniform disease of very conserved 'hallmark' behaviors across the entire spectrum of tissue and genetic differences [D. Hanahan, R.A. Weinberg, Hallmarks of cancer, Cell 100 (2000) 57-70]. This suggests that cancers do, indeed, share common biochemical and physiological characteristics that are independent of the varied genetic backgrounds, and that there may be a common mechanism underlying both the neoplastic transformation/progression side and the antineoplastic/therapy side of oncology. The challenge of modern oncology is to integrate all the diverse experimental data to create a physiological/metabolic/energetic paradigm that can unite our thinking in order to understand how both neoplastic progression and therapies function. This reductionist view gives the hope that, as in chemistry and physics, it will possible to identify common underlying driving forces that define a tumor and will permit, for the first time, the actual calculated manipulation of their state. That is, a rational therapeutic design. In the present review, we present evidence, obtained from a great number of studies, for a fundamental, underlying mechanism involved in the initiation and evolution of the neoplastic process. There is an ever growing body of evidence that all the important neoplastic phenotypes are driven by an alkalization of the transformed cell, a process which seems specific for transformed cells since the same alkalinization has no effect in cells that have not been transformed. Seen in that light, different fields of cancer research, from etiopathogenesis, cancer cell metabolism and neovascularization, to multiple drug resistance (MDR), selective apoptosis, modern cancer chemotherapy and the spontaneous regression of cancer (SRC) all appear to have in common a pivotal characteristic, the aberrant regulation of hydrogen ion dynamics [S. Harguindey, J.L. Pedraz, R. García Cañero, J. Pérez de Diego, E.J. Cragoe Jr., Hydrogen ion-dependent oncogenesis and parallel new avenues to cancer prevention and treatment using a H+-mediated unifying approach: pH-related and pH-unrelated mechanisms, Crit. Rev. Oncog. 6 (1) (1995) 1-33]. Cancer cells have an acid-base disturbance that is completely different than observed in normal tissues and that increases in correspondence with increasing neoplastic state: an interstitial acid microenvironment linked to an intracellular alkalosis.


Assuntos
Neoplasias/etiologia , Neoplasias/fisiopatologia , Trocadores de Sódio-Hidrogênio/fisiologia , Animais , Apoptose/efeitos dos fármacos , Transformação Celular Neoplásica , Transformação Celular Viral , Resistência a Múltiplos Medicamentos/efeitos dos fármacos , Resistencia a Medicamentos Antineoplásicos , Humanos , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Invasividade Neoplásica/fisiopatologia , Metástase Neoplásica/fisiopatologia , Regressão Neoplásica Espontânea , Neoplasias/terapia , Neovascularização Patológica , Oncogenes/fisiologia , Vírus Oncogênicos/fisiologia
20.
J Exp Clin Cancer Res ; 34: 93, 2015 Sep 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26337905

RESUMO

The treatment of cancer presents a clinical challenge both in human and veterinary medicine. Chemotherapy protocols require the use of toxic drugs that are not always specific, do not selectively target cancerous cells thus resulting in many side effects. A recent therapeutic approach takes advantage of the altered acidity of the tumour microenvironment by using proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) to block the hydrogen transport out of the cell. The alteration of the extracellular pH kills tumour cells, reverses drug resistance, and reduces cancer metastasis. Human clinical trials have prompted to consider this as a viable and safe option for the treatment of cancer in companion animals. Preliminary animal studies suggest that the same positive outcome could be achievable. The purpose of this review is to support investigations into the use of PPIs for cancer treatment cancer in companion animals by considering the evidence available in both human and veterinary medicine.


Assuntos
Antineoplásicos/uso terapêutico , Doenças do Cão/tratamento farmacológico , Doenças dos Cavalos/tratamento farmacológico , Neoplasias/veterinária , Inibidores da Bomba de Prótons/uso terapêutico , Animais , Antineoplásicos/farmacologia , Doenças do Cão/patologia , Cães , Resistencia a Medicamentos Antineoplásicos , Doenças dos Cavalos/patologia , Cavalos , Humanos , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Neoplasias/tratamento farmacológico , Neoplasias/patologia , Animais de Estimação , Inibidores da Bomba de Prótons/farmacologia
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