Cyclooxygenases in cancer: progress and perspective

Aspirin has been used to control pain and inflammation for over a century. Epidemiological studies first associated a decreased incidence of colorectal cancer with the long-term use of aspirin in the early 1980s. Near the same time the first reports showing regression of colorectal adenomas in respo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer letters 2004-11, Vol.215 (1), p.1-20
Hauptverfasser: Zha, Shan, Yegnasubramanian, Vasan, Nelson, William G., Isaacs, William B., De Marzo, Angelo M.
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container_issue 1
container_start_page 1
container_title Cancer letters
container_volume 215
creator Zha, Shan
Yegnasubramanian, Vasan
Nelson, William G.
Isaacs, William B.
De Marzo, Angelo M.
description Aspirin has been used to control pain and inflammation for over a century. Epidemiological studies first associated a decreased incidence of colorectal cancer with the long-term use of aspirin in the early 1980s. Near the same time the first reports showing regression of colorectal adenomas in response to the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) sulindac were reported. In subsequent years, the use of other NSAIDs, which inhibit cyclooxygenase (COX) enzymes, was linked to reduced cancer risk in multiple tissues including those of the breast, prostate, and lung. Together these studies resulted in the identification of a new cancer preventive and/or therapeutic target-COX enzymes, especially COX-2. Meanwhile, the overexpression of COX-2, and less consistently, the upstream and downstream enzymes of the prostaglandin synthesis pathway, was demonstrated in multiple cancer types and some pre-neoplastic lesions. Direct interactions of prostaglandins with their receptors through autocrine or paracrine pathways to enhance cellular survival or stimulate angiogenesis have been proposed as the molecular mechanisms underlying the pro-carcinogenic functions of COX-2. The rapid development of safe and effective inhibitors targeting individual COX enzymes not only dramatically improved our understanding of the function of COX-2, but also resulted in discovery of COX independent functions of NSAIDs, providing important hints for future drug design. Here we review the fundamental features of COX enzymes, especially as related to carcinogenesis, their expression and function in both animal tumor models and clinical cancers and the proposed mechanisms behind their roles in cancer.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.canlet.2004.06.014
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Direct interactions of prostaglandins with their receptors through autocrine or paracrine pathways to enhance cellular survival or stimulate angiogenesis have been proposed as the molecular mechanisms underlying the pro-carcinogenic functions of COX-2. The rapid development of safe and effective inhibitors targeting individual COX enzymes not only dramatically improved our understanding of the function of COX-2, but also resulted in discovery of COX independent functions of NSAIDs, providing important hints for future drug design. 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subjects Angiogenesis
Animals
Aspirin
Cancer
Clinical trials
Colon
Colorectal cancer
Cyclooxygenase
Cyclooxygenase Inhibitors - therapeutic use
Enzymes
Genes
Heart attacks
Humans
Molecular weight
Neoplasms - enzymology
Non-steroid anti-inflammation drug
Prostaglandin-Endoperoxide Synthases - physiology
Proteins
Review
Rodents
Studies
Tumors
Vegetables
title Cyclooxygenases in cancer: progress and perspective
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