Decavanadate and metformin-decavanadate effects in human melanoma cells.

J Inorg Biochem

Algarve Biomedical Center Research Institute (ABC-RI), Universidade do Algarve, Faro, Portugal; Algarve Biomedical Center (ABC), Faro, Portugal; Faculdade de Medicina e Ciências Biomédicas, Universidade do Algarve, Faro, Portugal.

Published: October 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Decavanadate is a polyoxometalate with notable biological activities, particularly in combating diabetes and cancer, showing promise when combined with metformin.
  • The metformin-decavanadate complex is more effective than metformin alone for diabetes treatment in rodent models and impacts Ca-ATPase activity differently than decavanadate alone.
  • Both compounds demonstrate antiproliferative effects on melanoma cells at lower concentrations, and they activate specific signaling proteins, hinting at their effects being independent of typical growth-factor pathways.

Article Abstract

Decavanadate is a polyoxometalate (POMs) that has shown extensive biological activities, including antidiabetic and anticancer activity. Importantly, vanadium-based compounds as well as antidiabetic biguanide drugs, such as metformin, have shown to exert therapeutic effects in melanoma. A combination of these agents, the metformin-decavanadate complex, was also recognized for its antidiabetic effects and recently described as a better treatment than the monotherapy with metformin enabling lower dosage in rodent models of diabetes. Herein, we compare the effects of decavanadate and metformin-decavanadate on Ca-ATPase activity in sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles from rabbit skeletal muscles and on cell signaling events and viability in human melanoma cells. We show that unlike the decavanadate-mediated non-competitive mechanism, metformin-decavanadate inhibits Ca-ATPase by a mixed-type competitive-non-competitive inhibition with an IC value about 6 times higher (87 μM) than the previously described for decavanadate (15 μM). We also found that both decavanadate and metformin-decavanadate exert antiproliferative effects on melanoma cells at 10 times lower concentrations than monomeric vanadate. Western blot analysis revealed that both, decavanadate and metformin-decavanadate increased phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and serine/threonine protein kinase AKT signaling proteins upon 24 h drug exposure, suggesting that the anti-proliferative activities of these compounds act independent of growth-factor signaling pathways.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jinorgbio.2022.111915DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

decavanadate metformin-decavanadate
16
melanoma cells
12
human melanoma
8
effects melanoma
8
decavanadate
6
effects
5
metformin-decavanadate
5
metformin-decavanadate effects
4
effects human
4
melanoma
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!