1. Nitric Oxide and Immune Responses in Cancer: Searching for New Therapeutic Strategies
- Author
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Pan Liao, Sina Negintaji, Hassan Rezai Ghaleno, Lingchao Miao, Tingyan Hu, Jesus Simal-Gandara, Mojtaba Shabani-Boroujeni, Jianbo Xiao, Fatemeh Saghafi, Mohammadreza Safdari, Antoni Sureda, Mingfu Wang, Adeleh Sahebnasagh, Yaping Qi, and Seyed Mohammad Nabavi
- Subjects
Carcinogenesis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Nitric Oxide Synthase Type II ,Cochrane Library ,Nitric Oxide ,Bioinformatics ,medicine.disease_cause ,Biochemistry ,Immune system ,Neoplasms ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Humans ,Nitric Oxide Donors ,Pharmacology ,biology ,business.industry ,Organic Chemistry ,Immunity ,Cancer ,Immunotherapy ,medicine.disease ,Nitric oxide synthase ,Clinical trial ,Tumor progression ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine ,business - Abstract
In recent years, there has been an increasing interest in understanding the mysterious functions of nitric oxide (NO) and how this pleiotropic signaling molecule contributes to tumorigenesis. This review attempts to expose and discuss the information available on the immunomodulatory role of NO in cancer and recent approaches to the role of NO donors in the area of immunotherapy. To address the goal, the following databases were searched to identify relevant literature concerning empirical evidence: The Cochrane Library, Pubmed, Medline, and EMBASE from 1980 through March 2020. Valuable attempts have been made to develop distinctive NO-based cancer therapy. Although the data do not allow generalization, the evidence seems to indicate that low/moderate levels may favor tumorigenesis, while higher levels would exert antitumor effects. In this sense, the use of NO donors could have an important therapeutic potential within immunotherapy, although there are still no clinical trials. The emerging understanding of NO-regulated immune responses in cancer may help unravel the recent features of this “doubleedged sword” in cancer physiological and pathologic processes and its potential use as a therapeutic agent for cancer treatment. In short, in this review, we discuss the complex cellular mechanism in which NO, as a pleiotropic signaling molecule, participates in cancer pathophysiology. We also debate the dual role of NO in cancer and tumor progression and clinical approaches for inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) based therapy against cancer.
- Published
- 2022
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