1. Academic Validation
  2. Sulfiredoxin inhibitor induces preferential death of cancer cells through reactive oxygen species-mediated mitochondrial damage

Sulfiredoxin inhibitor induces preferential death of cancer cells through reactive oxygen species-mediated mitochondrial damage

  • Free Radic Biol Med. 2016 Feb;91:264-74. doi: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2015.12.023.
Hojin Kim 1 Gong-Rak Lee 1 Jiwon Kim 1 Jin Young Baek 2 You-Jin Jo 1 Seong-Eun Hong 1 Sung Hoon Kim 1 Jiae Lee 1 Hye In Lee 1 Song-Kyu Park 3 Hwan Mook Kim 4 Hwa Jeong Lee 2 Tong-Shin Chang 2 Sue Goo Rhee 5 Ju-Seog Lee 6 Woojin Jeong 7
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Life Science and the Research Center for Cellular Homeostasis, Ewha Womans University, Seoul 120-750, South Korea.
  • 2 College of Pharmacy, Ewha Womans University, Seoul 120-750, South Korea.
  • 3 College of Pharmacy, Korea University, Sejong 339-700, South Korea.
  • 4 College of Pharmacy, Gachon University of Medicine and Science, Incheon 406-799, South Korea.
  • 5 Yonsei Biomedical Research Institute, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul 120-752, South Korea.
  • 6 Department of Systems Biology, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77054, USA.
  • 7 Department of Life Science and the Research Center for Cellular Homeostasis, Ewha Womans University, Seoul 120-750, South Korea. Electronic address: jeongw@ewha.ac.kr.
Abstract

Recent studies have shown that many types of Cancer cells have increased levels of Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) and enhance antioxidant capacity as an adaptation to intrinsic oxidative stress, suggesting that Cancer cells are more vulnerable to oxidative insults and are more dependent on antioxidant systems compared with normal cells. Thus, disruption of redox homeostasis caused by a decline in antioxidant capacity may provide a method for the selective death of Cancer cells. Here we show that ROS-mediated selective death of tumor cells can be caused by inhibiting sulfiredoxin (Srx), which reduces hyperoxidized peroxiredoxins, leading to their reactivation. Srx inhibitor increased the accumulation of sulfinic peroxiredoxins and ROS, which led to oxidative mitochondrial damage and Caspase activation, resulting in the death of A549 human lung adenocarcinoma cells. Srx depletion also inhibited the growth of A549 cells like Srx inhibition, and the cytotoxic effects of Srx inhibitor were considerably reversed by Srx overexpression or Antioxidants such as N-acetyl cysteine and butylated hydroxyanisol. Moreover, Srx inhibitor rendered tumorigenic ovarian cells more susceptible to ROS-mediated death compared with nontumorigenic cells and significantly suppressed the growth of A549 xenografts without acute toxicity. Our results suggest that Srx might serve as a novel therapeutic target for Cancer treatment based on ROS-mediated cell death.

Keywords

Apoptosis; Cancer; Mitochondrial damage; Reactive oxygen species; Sulfiredoxin.

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