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Droloxifene (3-hydroxytamoxifen) Has Membrane Antioxidant Ability: Potential Relevance to Its Mechanism of Therapeutic Action in Breast Cancer

Overview
Journal Cancer Lett
Specialty Oncology
Date 1992 Sep 14
PMID 1451097
Citations 1
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Abstract

Droloxifene (3-hydroxytamoxifen), is a triphenylethylene derivative recently developed for the treatment of breast cancer. Droloxifene was found to exhibit a membrane antioxidant ability in that it inhibited Fe(III)-ascorbate dependent lipid peroxidation in rat liver microsomes and ox-brain phospholipid liposomes. It also inhibited microsomal lipid peroxidation induced by Fe(III)-ADP/NADPH. Droloxifene was a better inhibitor of lipid peroxidation than tamoxifen, but was less effective than 17 beta-oestradiol in the two microsomal systems and in the preformed liposomal system. When introduced into ox-brain phospholipid liposomes, droloxifene inhibited Fe(III)-ascorbate induced lipid peroxidation to approximately the same extent as similarly introduced cholesterol and tamoxifen, although to a lesser extent than 17 beta-oestradiol. This inhibition of lipid peroxidation by droloxifene may result from a membrane stabilization that could be associated in cancer cells with decreased plasma membrane fluidity. This mechanism may be related to the clinically important antiproliferative action of droloxifene on cancer cells.

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