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Recent advances in caspase-3, breast cancer, and traditional Chinese medicine: a review

He Dou, Ping yang Yu, Yu qi Liu, Yue Zhu, Fu cheng Li, You yu Wang, Xing yan Chen, Min Xiao

2023Journal of Chemotherapy35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Caspases (cysteinyl aspartate-specific proteinases) are a group of structurally similar proteases in the cytoplasm that can be involved in cell differentiation, programmed death, proliferation, and inflammatory generation. Experts have found that caspase-3 can serve as a terminal splicing enzyme in apoptosis and participate in the mechanism by which cytotoxic drugs kill cancer cells. Breast cancer (BC) has become the most common cancer among women worldwide, posing a severe threat to their lives. Finding new therapeutic targets for BC is the primary task of contemporary physicians. Numerous studies have revealed the close association between caspase-3 expression and BC. Caspase-3 is essential in BC's occurrence, invasion, and metastasis. In addition, Caspase-3 exerts anticancer effects by regulating cell death mechanisms. Traditional Chinese medicine acting through caspase-3 expression is increasingly used in clinical treatment. This review summarizes the biological mechanism of caspase-3 and research progress on BC. It introduces a variety of traditional Chinese medicine related to caspase-3 to provide new ideas for the clinical treatment of BC.

Topics & Concepts

CaspaseProteasesApoptosisProgrammed cell deathCancer researchMetastasisMechanism (biology)CancerXIAPTraditional Chinese medicineCaspase 2MedicineCaspase 3Caspase 7BiologyInternal medicinePathologyEnzymeGeneticsAlternative medicineBiochemistryEpistemologyPhilosophyCell death mechanisms and regulationInflammasome and immune disordersinterferon and immune responses