Usefulness of melatonin as complementary to chemotherapeutic agents at different stages of the angiogenic process
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González- González, Alicia; Rueda Revilla, Noemí



Fecha
2020Derechos
Attribution 4.0 International
Publicado en
Scientific Reports volume 10, Article number: 4790 (2020)
Editorial
Nature Publishing Group
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Palabras clave
Physiology
Breast cancer
Resumen/Abstract
Chemotherapeutics are sometimes administered with drugs, like antiangiogenic compounds, to
increase their effectiveness. Melatonin exerts antitumoral actions through antiangiogenic actions.
We studied if melatonin regulates the response of HUVECs to chemotherapeutics (docetaxel and
vinorelbine). The inhibition that these agents exert on some of the processes involved in angiogenesis,
such as, cell proliferation, migratory capacity or vessel formation, was enhanced by melatonin.
Regarding to estrogen biosynthesis, melatonin impeded the negative effect of vinorelbine, by
decreasing the activity and expression of aromatase and sulfatase. Docetaxel and vinorelbine increased
the expression of VEGF-A, VEGF-B, VEGF-C, VEGFR-1, VEGFR-3, ANG1 and/or ANG-2 and melatonin
inhibited these actions. Besides, melatonin prevented the positive actions that docetaxel exerts on
the expression of other factors related to angiogenesis like JAG1, ANPEP, IGF-1, CXCL6, AKT1, ERK1,
ERK2, MMP14 and NOS3 and neutralized the stimulating actions of vinorelbine on the expression of
FIGF, FGFR3, CXCL6, CCL2, ERK1, ERK2, AKT1, NOS3 and MMP14. In CAM assay melatonin inhibited
new vascularization in combination with chemotherapeutics. Melatonin further enhanced the
chemotherapeutics-induced inhibition of p-AKT and p-ERK and neutralized the chemotherapeuticscaused
stimulatory effect on HUVECs permeability by modifying the distribution of VE cadherin. Our
results confirm that melatonin blocks proangiogenic and potentiates antiangiogenic effects induced by
docetaxel and vinorelbine enhancing their antitumor effectiveness.