Cisplatin as an Anti-Tumor Drug: Cellular Mechanisms of Activity, Drug Resistance and Induced Side Effects
Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf · Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar
Abstract
Platinum complexes are clinically used as adjuvant therapy of cancers aiming to induce tumor cell death. Depending on cell type and concentration, cisplatin induces cytotoxicity, e.g., by interference with transcription and/or DNA replication mechanisms. Additionally, cisplatin damages tumors via induction of apoptosis, mediated by the activation of various signal transduction pathways, including calcium signaling, death receptor signaling, and the activation of mitochondrial pathways. Unfortunately, neither cytotoxicity nor apoptosis are exclusively induced in cancer cells, thus, cisplatin might also lead to diverse side-effects such as neuro- and/or renal-toxicity or bone marrow-suppression. Moreover, the…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 17.32
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 86
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Cisplatin
- Apoptosis
- Signal transduction
- Cytotoxicity
- Cancer research
- Programmed cell death
- Cancer cell
- DNA repair
- Good health and well-being