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Tamoxifen Induces Oxidative Stress and Mitochondrial Apoptosis via Stimulating Mitochondrial Nitric Oxide Synthase

163

Citations

40

References

2007

Year

Abstract

Tamoxifen is an anticancer drug that induces oxidative stress and apoptosis via mitochondria-dependent and nitric oxide (NO)-dependent pathways. The present report shows that tamoxifen increases intramitochondrial ionized Ca(2+) concentration and stimulates mitochondrial NO synthase (mtNOS) activity in the mitochondria from rat liver and human breast cancer MCF-7 cells. By stimulating mtNOS, tamoxifen hampers mitochondrial respiration, releases cytochrome c, elevates mitochondrial lipid peroxidation, increases protein tyrosine nitration of certain mitochondrial proteins, decreases the catalytic activity of succinyl-CoA:3-oxoacid CoA-transferase, and induces aggregation of mitochondria. The present report suggests a critical role for mtNOS in apoptosis induced by tamoxifen.

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