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Protein Oxidative Damage in UV-Related Skin Cancer and Dysplastic Lesions Contributes to Neoplastic Promotion and Progression.

Authors :
Tramutola, Antonella
Falcucci, Susanna
Brocco, Umberto
Triani, Francesca
Lanzillotta, Chiara
Donati, Michele
Panetta, Chiara
Luzi, Fabiola
Iavarone, Federica
Vincenzoni, Federica
Castagnola, Massimo
Perluigi, Marzia
Di Domenico, Fabio
De Marco, Federico
Source :
Cancers; Jan2020, Vol. 12 Issue 1, p110, 1p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The ultraviolet (UV) component of solar radiation is the major driving force of skin carcinogenesis. Most of studies on UV carcinogenesis actually focus on DNA damage while their proteome-damaging ability and its contribution to skin carcinogenesis have remained largely underexplored. A redox proteomic analysis of oxidized proteins in solar-induced neoplastic skin lesion and perilesional areas has been conducted showing that the protein oxidative burden mostly concerns a selected number of proteins participating to a defined set of functions, namely: chaperoning and stress response; protein folding/refolding and protein quality control; proteasomal function; DNA damage repair; protein- and vesicle-trafficking; cell architecture, adhesion/extra-cellular matrix (ECM) interaction; proliferation/oncosuppression; apoptosis/survival, all of them ultimately concurring either to structural damage repair or to damage detoxication and stress response. In peri-neoplastic areas the oxidative alterations are conducive to the persistence of genetic alterations, dysfunctional apoptosis surveillance, and a disrupted extracellular environment, thus creating the condition for transformant clones to establish, expand and progress. A comparatively lower burden of oxidative damage is observed in neoplastic areas. Such a finding can reflect an adaptive selection of best fitting clones to the sharply pro-oxidant neoplastic environment. In this context the DNA damage response appears severely perturbed, thus sustaining an increased genomic instability and an accelerated rate of neoplastic evolution. In conclusion UV radiation, in addition to being a cancer-initiating agent, can act, through protein oxidation, as a cancer-promoting agent and as an inducer of genomic instability concurring with the neoplastic progression of established lesions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20726694
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Cancers
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
141457995
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers12010110