Putting the brakes on tumorigenesis with snake venom toxins: New molecular insights for cancer drug discovery

Urra, Felix A.; Araya-Maturana, Ramiro

Abstract

Cancer cells exhibit molecular characteristics that confer them different proliferative capacities and survival advantages to adapt to stress conditions, such as deregulation of cellular bioenergetics, genomic instability, ability to promote angiogenesis, invasion, cell dormancy, immune evasion, and cell death resistance. In addition to these hallmarks of cancer, the current cytostatic drugs target the proliferation of malignant cells, being ineffective in metastatic disease. These aspects highlight the need to identify promising therapeutic targets for new generations of anti-cancer drugs. Toxins isolated from snake venoms are a natural source of useful molecular scaffolds to obtain agents with a selective effect on cancer cells. In this article, we discuss the recent advances in the molecular mechanisms of nine classes of snake toxins that suppress the hallmarks of cancer by induction of oxidative phosphorylation dysfunction, reactive oxygen species-dependent DNA damage, blockage of extracellular matrix-integrin signaling, disruption of cytoskeleton network and inhibition of growth factor-dependent signaling. The possible therapeutic implications of toxin-based anti-cancer drug development are also highlighted.

Más información

Título según WOS: Putting the brakes on tumorigenesis with snake venom toxins: New molecular insights for cancer drug discovery
Título de la Revista: SEMINARS IN CANCER BIOLOGY
Volumen: 80
Editorial: ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Fecha de publicación: 2022
Página de inicio: 195
Página final: 204
DOI:

10.1016/j.semcancer.2020.05.006

Notas: ISI