Human heart cytosolic reductases and anthracycline cardiotoxicity.
IUBMB Life
; 52(1-2): 83-8, 2001 Jul.
Article
en En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-11795600
Anthracyclines are a class of antitumor drugs widely used for the treatment of a variety of malignancy, including leukemias, lymphomas, sarcomas, and carcinomas. Different mechanisms have been proposed for anthracycline antitumor effects including free-radical generation, DNA intercalation/binding, activation of signaling pathways, inhibition of topoisomerase II and apoptosis. A life-threatening form of cardiomyopathy hampers the clinical use of anthracyclines. According to the prevailing hypothesis, anthracyclines injure the heart by generating damaging free radicals through iron-catalyzed redox cycling. Although the "iron and free-radical hypothesis" can explain some aspects of anthracycline acute toxicity, it is nonetheless disappointing when referred to chronic cardiomyopathy. An alternative hypothesis implicates C-13 alcohol metabolites of anthracyclines as mediators of myocardial contractile dysfunction ("metabolite hypothesis"). Hydroxy metabolites are formed upon two-electron reduction of the C-13 carbonyl group in the side chain of anthracyclines by cytosolic NADPH-dependent reductases. Anthracycline alcohol metabolites can affect myocardial energy metabolism, ionic gradients, and Ca2+ movements, ultimately impairing cardiac contraction and relaxation. In addition, alcohol metabolites can impair cardiac intracellular iron handling and homeostasis, by delocalizing iron from the [4Fe-4S] cluster of cytoplasmic aconitase. Chronic cardiotoxicity induced by C-13 alcohol metabolite might be primed by oxidative stress generated by anthracycline redox cycling ("unifying hypothesis"). Putative cardioprotective strategies should be aimed at decreasing C-13 alcohol metabolite production by means of efficient inhibitors of anthracycline reductases, as short-chain coenzyme Q analogs and chalcones that compete with anthracyclines for the enzyme active site, or by developing novel anthracyclines less susceptible to reductive metabolism.
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Colección:
01-internacional
Base de datos:
MEDLINE
Asunto principal:
Oxidorreductasas
/
Antraciclinas
/
Citosol
/
Corazón
/
Miocardio
Límite:
Humans
Idioma:
En
Revista:
IUBMB Life
Asunto de la revista:
BIOLOGIA MOLECULAR
/
BIOQUIMICA
Año:
2001
Tipo del documento:
Article
País de afiliación:
Italia
Pais de publicación:
Reino Unido