The role of mitochondria as the electric engine of cells is well established. Over the past two decades, accumulating evidence has pointed out that, despite the presence of a highly active glycolytic pathway (Warburg effect), a functional and even upregulated mitochondrial respiration occurs in cancer cells to meet the need of high energy and the biosynthetic demand to sustain their anabolic growth. Mitochondria are also the primary source of intracellular ROS. Cancer cells maintain moderate levels of ROS to promote tumorigenesis, metastasis, and drug resistance; indeed, once the cytotoxicity threshold is exceeded, ROS trigger oxidative damage, ultimately leading to cell death. Based on this, mitochondrial metabolic functions and ROS generation are considered attractive targets of synthetic and natural anticancer compounds. Tocotrienols (TTs), specifically the δ- and γ-TT isoforms, are vitamin E-derived biomolecules widely shown to possess striking anticancer properties since they regulate several intracellular molecular pathways. Herein, we provide for the first time an overview of the mitochondrial metabolic reprogramming and redox homeostasis perturbation occurring in cancer cells, highlighting their involvement in the anticancer properties of TTs. This evidence sheds light on the use of these natural compounds as a promising preventive or therapeutic approach for novel anticancer strategies.

Molecular Insights in the Anticancer Activity of Natural Tocotrienols: Targeting Mitochondrial Metabolism and Cellular Redox Homeostasis / R. Chiaramonte, G. Sauro, D. Giannandrea, P. Limonta, L. Casati. - In: ANTIOXIDANTS. - ISSN 2076-3921. - 14:1(2025 Jan 20), pp. 115.1-115.21. [10.3390/antiox14010115]

Molecular Insights in the Anticancer Activity of Natural Tocotrienols: Targeting Mitochondrial Metabolism and Cellular Redox Homeostasis

R. Chiaramonte
Primo
;
G. Sauro
Secondo
;
D. Giannandrea
Penultimo
;
P. Limonta
Co-ultimo
;
L. Casati
Co-ultimo
2025

Abstract

The role of mitochondria as the electric engine of cells is well established. Over the past two decades, accumulating evidence has pointed out that, despite the presence of a highly active glycolytic pathway (Warburg effect), a functional and even upregulated mitochondrial respiration occurs in cancer cells to meet the need of high energy and the biosynthetic demand to sustain their anabolic growth. Mitochondria are also the primary source of intracellular ROS. Cancer cells maintain moderate levels of ROS to promote tumorigenesis, metastasis, and drug resistance; indeed, once the cytotoxicity threshold is exceeded, ROS trigger oxidative damage, ultimately leading to cell death. Based on this, mitochondrial metabolic functions and ROS generation are considered attractive targets of synthetic and natural anticancer compounds. Tocotrienols (TTs), specifically the δ- and γ-TT isoforms, are vitamin E-derived biomolecules widely shown to possess striking anticancer properties since they regulate several intracellular molecular pathways. Herein, we provide for the first time an overview of the mitochondrial metabolic reprogramming and redox homeostasis perturbation occurring in cancer cells, highlighting their involvement in the anticancer properties of TTs. This evidence sheds light on the use of these natural compounds as a promising preventive or therapeutic approach for novel anticancer strategies.
ROS generation; anticancer activity; cancer cells; mitochondrial metabolic reprogramming; novel anticancer strategies; redox homeostasis; tocotrienols
Settore MEDS-02/A - Patologia generale
Settore BIOS-10/A - Biologia cellulare e applicata
   Nano-ULTRON - uNrAveling the role of naNOplastics in mUltiple MyeLoma derived exTRacellular vesicles in educating bOne microenviroNment.
   Nano-ULTRON
   MINISTERO DELL'UNIVERSITA' E DELLA RICERCA
   P2022RSWWF_001

   Assegnazione Dipartimenti di Eccellenza 2023-2027 - Dipartimento di SCIENZE FARMACOLOGICHE E BIOMOLECOLARI
   DECC23_022
   MINISTERO DELL'UNIVERSITA' E DELLA RICERCA
20-gen-2025
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1160796
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