Targeting the redox imbalance in mitochondria: A novel mode for cancer therapy
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Swargiary, Geeta
Ralph, Stephen J
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Abstract
Changes in reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels affect many aspects of cell behavior. During carcinogenesis, moderate ROS production modifies gene expression to alter cell function, elevating metabolic activity and ROS. To avoid extreme ROS-activated death, cancer cells increase antioxidative capacity, regulating sustained ROS levels that promote growth. Anticancer therapies are exploring inducing supranormal, cytotoxic oxidative stress levels either inhibiting antioxidative capacity or promoting excess ROS to selectively destroy cancer cells, triggering mechanisms such as apoptosis, autophagy, necrosis, or ferroptosis. This review exemplifies pro-oxidants (natural/synthetic/repurposed drugs) and their clinical significance as cancer therapies providing revolutionary approaches.
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Mitochondrion
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62
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Biomedical and clinical sciences
Cancer therapy (excl. chemotherapy and radiation therapy)
Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences
Traditional, complementary and integrative medicine
Oncology and carcinogenesis
Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Cell Biology
Genetics & Heredity
Mitochondria
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Mani, S; Swargiary, G; Ralph, SJ, Targeting the redox imbalance in mitochondria: A novel mode for cancer therapy, Mitochondrion, 2021, 62, pp. 50-73