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pH-Selective Reactions to Selectively Reduce Cancer Cell Proliferation: Effect of CaS Nanostructures in Human Skin Melanoma and Benign Fibroblasts

An acidic extracellular pH value (pH(e)) is characteristic of many cancers, in contrast to the physiologic pH(e) found in most benign cells. This difference in pH offers a unique opportunity to design and engineer chemicals that can be employed for pH-selective reactions in the extracellular fluid o...

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Autores principales: Martínez, Olga M. Rodríguez, Ramos, Michelle A. Narváez, Acevedo, Angeliz A. Soto, Colón, Carolina C. Colón, Ramos, Darlene Malavé, Rivera, Coral Castro, Rosario, Miguel E. Castro
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10079261/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37035583
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biochem3010002
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author Martínez, Olga M. Rodríguez
Ramos, Michelle A. Narváez
Acevedo, Angeliz A. Soto
Colón, Carolina C. Colón
Ramos, Darlene Malavé
Rivera, Coral Castro
Rosario, Miguel E. Castro
author_facet Martínez, Olga M. Rodríguez
Ramos, Michelle A. Narváez
Acevedo, Angeliz A. Soto
Colón, Carolina C. Colón
Ramos, Darlene Malavé
Rivera, Coral Castro
Rosario, Miguel E. Castro
author_sort Martínez, Olga M. Rodríguez
collection PubMed
description An acidic extracellular pH value (pH(e)) is characteristic of many cancers, in contrast to the physiologic pH(e) found in most benign cells. This difference in pH offers a unique opportunity to design and engineer chemicals that can be employed for pH-selective reactions in the extracellular fluid of cancer cells. The viability of human skin melanoma and corresponding fibroblasts exposed to CaS dispersions is reported. The viability of melanoma cells decreases with CaS dispersion concentration and reaches 57% at 3%, a value easily distinguishable from melanoma control experiments. In contrast, the viability of benign fibroblasts remains nearly constant within experimental error over the range of dispersion concentrations studied. The CaS dispersions facilitate vinculin delocalization in the cytoplasmic fluid, a result consistent with improved focal adhesion kinase (FAK) regulation in melanoma cells. Thermodynamic considerations are consistent with the formation of [Formula: see text] from CaS in the presence of protons. The thermodynamic prediction is verified in independent experiments with solid CaS and acidic aqueous solutions. The amount of [Formula: see text] formed decreases with pH. An activation energy for the process of (30 ± 10) kJ/mol in the temperature range of 280 to 330 K is estimated from initial rate measurements as a function of temperature. The total Gibbs energy minimization approach was employed to establish the distribution of sulfides—including [Formula: see text] in the gas and aqueous phases—from the dissociation of CaS as a function of pH to mimic physiologically relevant pH values. Theoretical calculations suggest that partially protonated CaS in solution can be stable until the sulfur atom bonds to two hydrogen atoms, resulting in the formation of Ca(2+) and [Formula: see text] , which can be solvated and/or released to the gas phase. Our results are consistent with a model in which CaS is dissociated in the extracellular fluid of melanoma cells selectively. The results are discussed in the context of the potential biomedical applications of CaS dispersions in cancer therapies.
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spelling pubmed-100792612023-04-06 pH-Selective Reactions to Selectively Reduce Cancer Cell Proliferation: Effect of CaS Nanostructures in Human Skin Melanoma and Benign Fibroblasts Martínez, Olga M. Rodríguez Ramos, Michelle A. Narváez Acevedo, Angeliz A. Soto Colón, Carolina C. Colón Ramos, Darlene Malavé Rivera, Coral Castro Rosario, Miguel E. Castro Biochem (Basel) Article An acidic extracellular pH value (pH(e)) is characteristic of many cancers, in contrast to the physiologic pH(e) found in most benign cells. This difference in pH offers a unique opportunity to design and engineer chemicals that can be employed for pH-selective reactions in the extracellular fluid of cancer cells. The viability of human skin melanoma and corresponding fibroblasts exposed to CaS dispersions is reported. The viability of melanoma cells decreases with CaS dispersion concentration and reaches 57% at 3%, a value easily distinguishable from melanoma control experiments. In contrast, the viability of benign fibroblasts remains nearly constant within experimental error over the range of dispersion concentrations studied. The CaS dispersions facilitate vinculin delocalization in the cytoplasmic fluid, a result consistent with improved focal adhesion kinase (FAK) regulation in melanoma cells. Thermodynamic considerations are consistent with the formation of [Formula: see text] from CaS in the presence of protons. The thermodynamic prediction is verified in independent experiments with solid CaS and acidic aqueous solutions. The amount of [Formula: see text] formed decreases with pH. An activation energy for the process of (30 ± 10) kJ/mol in the temperature range of 280 to 330 K is estimated from initial rate measurements as a function of temperature. The total Gibbs energy minimization approach was employed to establish the distribution of sulfides—including [Formula: see text] in the gas and aqueous phases—from the dissociation of CaS as a function of pH to mimic physiologically relevant pH values. Theoretical calculations suggest that partially protonated CaS in solution can be stable until the sulfur atom bonds to two hydrogen atoms, resulting in the formation of Ca(2+) and [Formula: see text] , which can be solvated and/or released to the gas phase. Our results are consistent with a model in which CaS is dissociated in the extracellular fluid of melanoma cells selectively. The results are discussed in the context of the potential biomedical applications of CaS dispersions in cancer therapies. 2023-03 2023-01-18 /pmc/articles/PMC10079261/ /pubmed/37035583 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biochem3010002 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Martínez, Olga M. Rodríguez
Ramos, Michelle A. Narváez
Acevedo, Angeliz A. Soto
Colón, Carolina C. Colón
Ramos, Darlene Malavé
Rivera, Coral Castro
Rosario, Miguel E. Castro
pH-Selective Reactions to Selectively Reduce Cancer Cell Proliferation: Effect of CaS Nanostructures in Human Skin Melanoma and Benign Fibroblasts
title pH-Selective Reactions to Selectively Reduce Cancer Cell Proliferation: Effect of CaS Nanostructures in Human Skin Melanoma and Benign Fibroblasts
title_full pH-Selective Reactions to Selectively Reduce Cancer Cell Proliferation: Effect of CaS Nanostructures in Human Skin Melanoma and Benign Fibroblasts
title_fullStr pH-Selective Reactions to Selectively Reduce Cancer Cell Proliferation: Effect of CaS Nanostructures in Human Skin Melanoma and Benign Fibroblasts
title_full_unstemmed pH-Selective Reactions to Selectively Reduce Cancer Cell Proliferation: Effect of CaS Nanostructures in Human Skin Melanoma and Benign Fibroblasts
title_short pH-Selective Reactions to Selectively Reduce Cancer Cell Proliferation: Effect of CaS Nanostructures in Human Skin Melanoma and Benign Fibroblasts
title_sort ph-selective reactions to selectively reduce cancer cell proliferation: effect of cas nanostructures in human skin melanoma and benign fibroblasts
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10079261/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37035583
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biochem3010002
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