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Lipoxygenase Inhibitors as Potential Cancer Chemopreventives
Mounting evidence suggests that lipoxygenase (LO)-catalyzed products have a profound influence on the development and progression of human cancers. Compared with normal tissues, significantly elevated levels of LO metabolites have been found in lung, prostate, breast, colon, and skin cancer cells, a...
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Published in: | Cancer epidemiology, biomarkers & prevention biomarkers & prevention, 1999-05, Vol.8 (5), p.467-483 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Mounting evidence suggests that lipoxygenase (LO)-catalyzed products have a profound influence on the development and progression
of human cancers. Compared with normal tissues, significantly elevated levels of LO metabolites have been found in lung, prostate,
breast, colon, and skin cancer cells, as well as in cells from patients with both acute and chronic leukemias. LO-mediated
products elicit diverse biological activities needed for neoplastic cell growth, influencing growth factor and transcription
factor activation, oncogene induction, stimulation of tumor cell adhesion, and regulation of apoptotic cell death. Agents
that block LO-catalyzed activity may be effective in preventing cancer by interfering with signaling events needed for tumor
growth. In fact, in a few studies, LO inhibitors have prevented carcinogen-induced lung adenomas and rat mammary gland cancers.
During the past 10 years, pharmacological agents that specifically inhibit the LO-mediated signaling pathways are now commercially
available to treat inflammatory diseases such as asthma, arthritis, and psoriasis. These well-characterized agents, representing
two general drug effect mechanisms, are considered good candidates for clinical chemoprevention studies. One mechanism is
inhibition of LO activity (5-LO and associated enzymes, or 12-LO); the second is leukotriene receptor antagonism. Although
the receptor antagonists have high potential in treating asthma and other diseases where drug effects are clearly mediated
by the leukotriene receptors, enzyme activity inhibitors may be better candidates for chemopreventive intervention, because
inhibition of these enzymes directly reduces fatty acid metabolite production, with concomitant damping of the associated
inflammatory, proliferative, and metastatic activities that contribute to carcinogenesis. However, because receptor antagonists
have aerosol formulations and possible antiproliferative activity, they may also have potential, particularly in the lung,
where topical application of such formulations is feasible. |
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ISSN: | 1055-9965 1538-7755 |