Association of tumour microenvironment with protein glycooxidation, dna damage, and nitrosative stress in colorectal cancer

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Abstract

Purpose: In this study, we evaluated the total antioxidant capacity, nitrosative stress, and protein/DNA oxidation and glycoxidation products in patients with colorectal cancer regarding histopathological parameters associated with the tumour microenvironment, such as inflammatory infiltration and tumour budding and compare all determined parameters between tumours located in the right and left side of the colon and normal mucosa. Patients and Methods: Ferric reducing antioxidant power (FRAP), nitrosative stress (myeloperoxidase (MPO), nitrogen oxide (NO), peroxynitrite, and nitrotyrosine), protein oxidation products (protein carbonyls (PC), total thiols, and ischemia modified albumin (IMA)), protein glycooxidation products (tryptophan, kynurenine, N-formylkynurenine, dityrosine, Amadori product, advanced glycation end products (AGE)) and 8-hydroxydeox-yguanosine (8-OHdG) were measured in homogenates from normal and cancerous tissue of 30 patients with colorectal cancer. Results: Levels of FRAP (p=0.0009), IMA (p=0.0002), kynurenine (p<0.0001), N-formylkynurenine (p<0.0001), dityrosine (p<0.0001), Amadori products (p=0.0024), AGE (p<0.0001), MPO (p<0.0001), NO (p<0.0001) and nitrotyrosine (p=0.0011) were increased, whereas PC (p=0.0004), tryptophan (p<0.0001), 8-OHdG (p<0.0001) and perox-ynitrite (p=0.0003) were decreased in the left-side tumour compared to the right-side tumour and normal mucosa. Conclusion: Our results showed that colorectal cancer is related with disturbances in antioxidant defense and increased oxidative and nitrosative damages to proteins and DNA. These parameters may be useful for evaluation the progression and differentiation of the tumour location. We also demonstrated that redox indicators may depend on the histological type of the tumour and may influence tumour invasion depth, presence of lymph node and distant metastasis, vascular and neural invasion, inflammatory infiltration, and tumour bud-ding, which are part of the tumour microenvironment.

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Zińczuk, J., Zaręba, K., Kamińska, J., Koper-Lenkiewicz, O. M., Dymicka-Piekarska, V., Pryczynicz, A., … Maciejczyk, M. (2021). Association of tumour microenvironment with protein glycooxidation, dna damage, and nitrosative stress in colorectal cancer. Cancer Management and Research, 13, 6329–6348. https://doi.org/10.2147/CMAR.S314940

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