Category Archives: inflammation

Carnosol

Cancer: Breast, prostate, skin, colon, leukemia, stomach

Action: Anti-inflammatrory, anti-angiogenic

Carnosol is found in certain Mediterranean meats, fruits, vegetables, and olive oil. In particular, it is sourced from rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis (L.)) and desert sage (Salvia pachyphylla (Epling ex Munz)).

Prostate Cancer, Breast Cancer, Skin Cancer, Colon Cancer, Leukemia

One agent, carnosol, has been evaluated for anti-cancer property in prostate, breast, skin, leukemia, and colon cancer with promising results. These studies have provided evidence that carnosol targets multiple deregulated pathways associated with inflammation and cancer that include nuclear factor kappa B (NFκB), apoptotic related proteins, phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3 K)/Akt, androgen and estrogen receptors, as well as molecular targets. In addition, carnosol appears to be well tolerated in that it has a selective toxicity towards cancer cells versus non-tumorigenic cells and is well tolerated when administered to animals.

This mini-review reports on the pre-clinical studies that have been performed to date with carnosol describing mechanistic, efficacy, and safety/tolerability studies as a cancer chemoprevention and anti-cancer agent (Johnson, 2011).

Literature evidence from animal and cell culture studies demonstrates the anti-cancer potential of rosemary extract, carnosol, carnosic acid, ursolic acid, and rosmarinic acid to suppress the development of tumors in several organs including the colon, breast, liver, stomach, as well as melanoma and leukemia cells (Ngo et al., 2011).

Anti-inflammatory

Treatment with retinoic acid (RA) or carnosol, two structurally unrelated compounds with anti-cancer properties, inhibited phorbol ester (PMA)-mediated induction of activator protein-1 (AP-1) activity and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) expression in human mammary epithelial cells. Treatment with carnosol but not RA blocked increased binding of AP-1 to the COX-2 promoter. Carnosol but not RA inhibited the activation of PKC, ERK1/2, p38, and c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase mitogen-activated protein kinase. Overexpressing c-Jun but not CBP/p300 reversed the suppressive effect of carnosol on PMA-mediated stimulation of COX-2 promoter activity.

Carnosol inhibited the induction of COX-2 by blocking PKC signaling and thereby the binding of AP-1 to the CRE of the COX-2 promoter. Taken together, these results show that small molecules can block the activation of COX-2 transcription by distinct mechanisms (Subbaramaiah, 2002).

Breast Cancer

Two rosemary components, carnosol and ursolic acid, appear to be partly responsible for the anti-tumorigenic activity of rosemary. Supplementation of diets for 2 weeks with rosemary extract (0.5% by wt) but not carnosol (1.0%) or ursolic acid (0.5%) resulted in a significant decrease in the in vivo formation of rat mammary DMBA-DNA adducts, compared to controls. When injected intraperitoneally (i.p.) for 5 days at 200 mg/kg body wt, rosemary and carnosol, but not ursolic acid, significantly inhibited mammary adduct formation by 44% and 40%, respectively, compared to controls. Injection of this dose of rosemary and carnosol was associated with a significant 74% and 65% decrease, respectively, in the number of DMBA-induced mammary adenocarcinomas per rat, compared to controls. Ursolic acid injection had no effect on mammary tumorigenesis.

Therefore, carnosol is one rosemary constituent that can prevent DMBA-induced DNA damage and tumor formation in the rat mammary gland, and, thus, has potential for use as a breast cancer chemopreventative agent (Singletary et al., 1996).

Anti-angiogenic

The anti-angiogenic activity of carnosol and carnosic acid could contribute to the chemo-preventive, anti-tumoral and anti-metastatic activities of rosemary extracts and suggests that there is potential in the treatment of other angiogenesis-related malignancies (L-pez-JimŽnez et al., 2013).

References:

Johnson JJ. (2011). Carnosol: A promising anti-cancer and anti-inflammatory agent. Cancer Letters, 305(1):1-7. doi:10.1016/j.canlet.2011.02.005.


L-pez-JimŽnez A, Garc'a-Caballero M, Medina Mç, Quesada AR. (2013). Anti-angiogenic properties of carnosol and carnosic acid, two major dietary compounds from rosemary. Eur J Nutr, 52(1):85-95. doi: 10.1007/s00394-011-0289-x.


Ngo SN, Williams DB, Head RJ. (2011). Rosemary and cancer prevention: preclinical perspectives. Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr, 51(10):946-54. doi: 10.1080/10408398.2010.490883.


Singletary K, MacDonald C & Wallig M. (1996). Inhibition by rosemary and carnosol of 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA)-induced rat mammary tumorigenesis and in vivo DMBA-DNA adduct formation. Cancer Letters, 104(1):43-8. doi: 10.1016/0304-3835(96)04227-9


Subbaramaiah K, Cole PA, Dannenberg AJ. (2002). Retinoids and Carnosol Suppress Cyclooxygenase-2 Transcription by CREB-binding Protein/p300-dependent and -independent Mechanisms. Cancer Res, 62:2522

LCS101

Cancer: Breast

Action: Chemotherapy, immunomodular

Breast Cancer

Samuels, Maimon, and Zisk-Rony, (2013) treated a series of 20 female breast cancer patients with the botanical compound LCS101 as adjuvant to conventional chemotherapy. At the end of the treatment regimen, patients rated their symptoms. Seventy percent reported that they had either no or mildly severe levels of fatigue; 60% none to mildly severe weakness; 85% none to mildly severe pain; 70% none to mildly severe nausea; and 80% none to mildly severe vomiting. Only 20% reported severe impairment of overall function, and only 40% severely impaired QOL. No toxic effects were attributed by patients to the LCS101 treatment, and 85% reported that they believed the botanical compound had helped reduce symptoms.

Immunomodular

NK cells are considered to be a central mediator in the 'cross talk' between the adaptive and the innate immune systems, and play an important role in the inhibition and killing of tumor cells (Lee & Gasser, 2010). The LCS101 component Astragalus membranaceus has been shown to stimulate NK-cell activity in human peripheral lymphocytes, as well as restoring steroid-inhibited NK-cell activity (Mills & Bone, 2000). Polysaccharides of this herb were shown to enhance NK cell activity of normal subjects and patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. LCS101 was also shown to enhance cytokine production, increasing TNF-α secretion from murine macrophages 100-fold when compared to untreated controls. TNF-α is a potent anti-tumor cytokine that enhances the activity of macrophages, NK cells, and cytotoxic T cells.

Finally, LCS101 was observed to increase production of IFN-γ, correcting decreased levels following 5-FU treatment, and increasing unaltered levels of the cytokine following exposure to doxorubicin. IFN-γ production is induced by T cells, NK cells, and macrophages, and plays a role in the inhibition of tumor growth, promotion of Th1 immune responses, and differentiation of cytotoxic NK and T cells. Immune-competent mice who lack IFN-γ fail to normalize tissue homeostasis and clear low-level microbial infections, resulting in chronic inflammation with an increased incidence of hematological and solid-tissue cancers (Rachmut et al., 2013).

Induced Hematological Toxicities

Sixty-five breast cancer patients were recruited, with 34 allocated to LCS101 and 31 allocated to placebo treatment. Patients in the treatment group developed significantly less severe (grades 2-4) anemia (p < .01) and leukopenia (p < .03) when comparing grades 0-1 with grades 2-4, with significantly less neutropenia (p < .04) when comparing grades 0-2 with grades 3-4. This effect was more significant among patients undergoing a dose-dense regimen. The addition of LCS101 to anthracycline- and taxane-based chemotherapy is safe and well-tolerated, and may significantly prevent some chemotherapy-induced hematological toxicities in early breast cancer patients (Yaal-Hahoshen et al., 2011).

LCS101 Formula:

Astragalus membranaceus, Poriae cocos, Atractylodes macrocephala, Lycium chinense, Ligustrum lucidum, Paeonia lactiflora, Paeonia obovata, Citrus reticulata, Ophiopogon japonicus, Milletia reticulata, Oldenlandia diffusa, Scutellaria barbata, Prunella vulgaris, and Glehnia littoralis.

References

Rachmut IH, Samuels N, Melnick SJ, et al. (2013). Immunomodulatory effects of the botanical compound LCS101: implications for cancer treatment. Onco Targets Ther, 6:437–445. doi:10.2147/OTT.S42038.


Samuels N, Maimon Y, Zisk-Rony RY. (2013). Effect of the Botanical Compound LCS101 on Chemotherapy-Induced Symptoms in Patients with Breast Cancer: A Case Series Report. Integr Med Insights, 8:1–8. doi: 10.4137/IMI.S10841.


Yaal-Hahoshen N, Maimon Y, Siegelmann-Danieli N, et al. (2011). A prospective, controlled study of the botanical compound mixture LCS101 for chemotherapy-induced hematological complications in breast cancer. Oncologist, 16(9):1197-202. doi: 10.1634/theoncologist.2011-0150.

Baicalin & Baicalein

Cancer:
Myeloma, liver, colorectal., breast, prostate, oral., hepatoma, ovarian

Action: Anti-cancer, cardiovascular disease, cytostatic, cardio-protective against Doxorubicin, anti-inflammatory, angiogenesis

Baicalin and baicalein are naturally occurring flavonoids that are found in the roots and leaves of some Chinese medicinal plants (including Scutellaria radix, Scutellaria rivularis (Benth.); Scutellaria baicalensis (Georgi) and Scutellaria lateriflora (L.)) are thought to have anti-oxidant activity and possible anti-angiogenic, anti-cancer, anxiolytic, anti-inflammatory and neuroprotective activities. In particular, Scutellaria baicalensis is one of the most popular and multi-purpose herbs used in China traditionally for treatment of inflammation, hypertension, cardiovascular diseases, and bacterial and viral infections (Ye et al., 2002; Zhang et al., 2011a).

Anti-cancer

Accumulating evidence demonstrates that Scutellaria also possesses potent anti-cancer activities. The bioactive components of Scutellaria have been confirmed to be flavones, wogonin, baicalein and baicalin. These phytochemicals are not only cytostatic but also cytotoxic to various human tumor cell lines in vitro and inhibit tumor growth in vivo. Most importantly, they show almost no or minor toxicity to normal epithelial and normal peripheral blood and myeloid cells. The anti-tumor functions of these flavones are largely due to their abilities to scavenge oxidative radicals, to attenuate NF-kappaB activity, to inhibit several genes important for regulation of the cell-cycle, to suppress COX-2 gene expression and to prevent viral infections (Li, 2008).

Multiple Myeloma

In the search for a more effective adjuvant therapy to treat multiple myeloma (MM), Ma et al. (2005) investigated the effects of the traditional Chinese herbal medicines Huang-Lian-Jie-Du-Tang (HLJDT), Gui-Zhi-Fu-Ling-Wan (GZFLW), and Huang-Lian-Tang (HLT) on the proliferation and apoptosis of myeloma cells. HLJDT inhibited the proliferation of myeloma cell lines and the survival of primary myeloma cells, especially MPC-1- immature myeloma cells, and induced apoptosis in myeloma cell lines via a mitochondria-mediated pathway by reducing mitochondrial membrane potential and activating caspase-9 and caspase-3.

Further experiments confirmed that Scutellaria radix was responsible for the suppressive effect of HLJDT on myeloma cell proliferation, and the baicalein in Scutellaria radix showed strong growth inhibition and induction of apoptosis in comparison with baicalin or wogonin. Baicalein as well as baicalin suppressed the survival in vitro of MPC-1- immature myeloma cells rather than MPC-1+ myeloma cells from myeloma patients.

Baicalein inhibited the phosphorylation of IkB-alpha, which was followed by decreased expression of the IL-6 and XIAP genes and activation of caspase-9 and caspase-3. Therefore, HLJDT and Scutellaria radix have an anti-proliferative effect on myeloma cells, especially MPC-1- immature myeloma cells, and baicalein may be responsible for the suppressive effect of Scutellaria radix by blocking IkB-alpha degradation (Ma, 2005).

Hepatoma

The effects of the flavonoids from Scutellaria baicalensis Georgi (baicalein, baicalin and wogonin) in cultured human hepatoma cells (Hep G2, Hep 3B and SK-Hep1) were compared by MTT assay and flow cytometry. All three flavonoids dose-dependently decreased the cell viabilities accompanying the collapse of mitochondrial membrane potential and the depletion of glutathione content. However, the influence of baicalein, baicalin or wogonin on cell-cycle progression was different.

All three flavonoids resulted in prominent increase of G2/M population in Hep G2 cells, whereas an accumulation of sub G1 (hypoploid) peak in Hep 3B cells was observed. In SK-Hep1 cells, baicalein and baicalin resulted in a dramatic boost in hypoploid peak, but wogonin mainly in G1 phase accumulation. These data, together with the previous findings in other hepatoma cell lines, suggest that baicalein, baicalin and wogonin might be effective candidates for inducing apoptosis or inhibiting proliferation in various human hepatoma cell lines (Chang, 2002).

Long dan xie gan tang (pinyin) is one of the most commonly used herbal formulas by patients with chronic liver disease in China. Accumulated anecdotal evidence suggests that Long dan tang may have beneficial effects in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. Long dan tang is comprised of five herbs: Gentiana root, Scutellaria root, Gardenia fruit, Alisma rhizome, and Bupleurum root. The cytotoxic effects of compounds from the five major ingredients isolated from the above plants, i.e. gentiopicroside, baicalein, geniposide, alisol B acetate and saikosaponin-d, were investigated, respectively, on human hepatoma Hep3B cells..

Interestingly, baicalein by itself induced an increase in H(2)O(2) generation and the subsequent NF-kappaB activation; furthermore, it effectively inhibited the transforming growth factor-beta(1) (TGF-beta(1))-induced caspase-3 activation and cell apoptosis. Results suggest that alisol B acetate and saikosaponin-d induced cell apoptosis through the caspase-3-dependent and -independent pathways, respectively. Instead of inducing apoptosis, baicalein inhibits TGF-beta(1)-induced apoptosis via increase in cellular H(2)O(2) formation and NF-kappaB activation in human hepatoma Hep3B cells (Chou, Pan, Teng & Guh, 2003).

Ovarian Cancer

Ovarian cancer is one of the primary causes of death for women all through the Western world. Two kinds of ovarian cancer (OVCAR-3 and CP-70) cell lines and a normal ovarian cell line (IOSE-364) were selected to be investigated in the inhibitory effect of baicalin and baicalein on cancer cells. Largely, baicalin and baicalein inhibited ovarian cancer cell viability in both ovarian cancer cell lines with LD50 values in the range of 45-55 µM for baicalin and 25-40 µM for baicalein. On the other hand, both compounds had fewer inhibitory effects on normal ovarian cells viability with LD50 values of 177 µM for baicalin and 68 µM for baicalein.

Baicalin decreased expression of VEGF (20 µM), cMyc (80 µM), and NFkB (20 µM); baicalein decreased expression of VEGF (10 µM), HIF-1α (20 µM), cMyc (20 µM), and NFkB (40 µM). Therefore baicalein is more effective in inhibiting cancer cell viability and expression of VEGF, HIF-1α, cMyc, and NFκB in both ovarian cancer cell lines. It seems that baicalein inhibited cancer cell viability through the inhibition of cancer promoting genes expression including VEGF, HIF-1α, cMyc, and NFκB.

Overall, this study showed that baicalein and baicalin significantly inhibited the viability of ovarian cancer cells, while generally exerting less of an effect on normal cells. They have potential for chemoprevention and treatment of ovarian cancers (Chen, 2013).

Breast Cancer

Baicalin was found to be a potent inhibitor of mammary cell line MCF-7 and ductal breast epithelial tumor cell line T-47D proliferation, as well as having anti-proliferative effects on other cancer types such as the human head and neck cancer epithelial cell lines CAL-27 and FaDu. Overall, baicalin inhibited the proliferation of human breast cancer cells and CAL-27 and FaDu cells with effective potency (Franek, 2005).

Breast Cancer, Cell Invasion

The effect of Baicalein on cell viability of the human breast cancer MDA-MB-231 cell line was tested by MTT. 50, 100 µmol·L-1 of Baicalein inhibited significantly cell invasion(P0.01) and migration(P0.01) compared with control groups. The inhibitory rates were 50% and 77% in cell migration and 15% and 44% in cell invasion, respectively. 50 µmol·L-1 of Baicalein significantly inhibited the level of MMP 2 expression. 100 µmol·L-1 of Baicalein significantly inhibited the level of MMP 9 and uPA expressions.

Baicalein inhibits invasion and migration of MDA-MB-231 cells. The mechanisms may be involved in the direct inhibition of cell invasion and migration abilities, and the inhibition of MMP 2, MMP 9, and uPA expressions (Wang et al., 2010).

The proliferation of MDA-MB-231 cell line human breast adenocarcinoma was inhibited by baicalin in a dose-and time-dependent manner and the IC50 was 151 µmol/L. The apoptotic rate of the baicalin-treated MDA-MB-231 cells increased significantly at 48 hours. Flow cytometer analysis also revealed that most of the baicalin-treated MDA-MB-231 cells were arrested in the G2/M phase. Typically apoptotic characteristics such as condensed chromatin and apoptotic bodies were observed after being treated with baicalin for 48 hours.

The results of RT-PCR showed that the expression of bax was up-regulated; meanwhile, the expression of bcl-2 was down-regulated. Baicalin could inhibit the proliferation of MDA-MB-231 cells through apoptosis by regulating the expression of bcl-2, bax and intervening in the process of the cell-cycle (Zhu et al., 2008).

Oral Cancer

As an aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) ligand, baicalein at high concentrations blocks AhR-mediated dioxin toxicity. Because AhR had been reported to play a role in regulating the cell-cycle, it is suspected that the anti-cancer effect of baicalein is associated with AhR. The molecular mechanism involved in the anti-cancer effect of baicalein in oral cancer cells HSC-3 has been investigated, including whether such an effect would be AhR-mediated. Results revealed that baicalein inhibited cell proliferation and increased AhR activity in a dose-dependent manner. Cell-cycle was arrested at the G1 phase and the expression of CDK4, cyclin D1, and phosphorylated retinoblastoma (pRb) was decreased.

When cells were pre-treated with LiCl, the inhibitor of GSK-3β, the decrease of cyclin D1 was blocked and the reduction of pRb was recovered. The data indicates that in HSC-3 the reduction of pRb is mediated by baicalein both through activation of AhR and facilitation of cyclin D1 degradation, which causes cell-cycle arrest at the G1 phase, and results in the inhibition of cell proliferation (Cheng, 2012).

Anti-inflammatory

Baicalin has also been examined for its effects on LPS-induced nitric oxide (NO) production and iNOS and COX-2 gene expressions in RAW 264.7 macrophages. The results indicated that baicalin inhibited LPS-induced NO production in a concentration-dependent manner without a notable cytotoxic effect on these cells. The decrease in NO production was consistent with the inhibition by baicalin of LPS-induced iNOS gene expression (Chen, 2001)

Angiogenesis Modulation

The modulation of angiogenesis is one possible mechanism by which baicalin may act in the treatment of cardiovascular diseases. This may be elucidated by investigating the effects of baicalin on the expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), a critical factor for angiogenesis. The effects of baicalin and an extract of S. baicalensis on VEGF expression were tested in several cell lines. Both agents induced VEGF expression in all cells without increasing expression of hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha (HIF-1alpha).

Their ability to induce VEGF expression was suppressed once ERRalpha expression was knocked down by siRNA, or ERRalpha-binding sites were deleted in the VEGF promoter. It was also found that both agents stimulated cell migration and vessel sprout formation from the aorta. These results therefore implicate baicalin and S. baicalensis in angiogenesis by inducing VEGF expression through the activation of the ERRalpha pathway (Zhang, 2011b).

Colon Cancer

The compounds of baicalein and wogonin, derived from the Chinese herb Scutellaria baicalensis, were studied for their effect in suppressing the viability of HT-29 human colon cancer cells. Following treatment with baicalein or wogonin, several apoptotic events were observed, including DNA fragmentation, chromatin condensation and increased cell-cycle arrest at the G1 phase. Baicalein and wogonin decreased Bcl-2 expression, whereas the expression of Bax was increased in a dose-dependent manner when compared to the control.

The results indicated that baicalein induced apoptosis via Akt activation, in a p53-dependent manner, in HT-29 colon cancer cells. Baicalein may serve as a chemo-preventive, or therapeutic, agent for HT-29 colon cancer (Kim et al., 2012).

Cardio-protective

The cardiotoxicity of doxorubicin limits its clinical use in the treatment of a variety of malignancies. Previous studies suggest that doxorubicin-associated cardiotoxicity is mediated by reactive oxygen species (ROS)-induced apoptosis. Baicalein attenuated phosphorylation of JNK induced by doxorubicin. Co-treatment of cardiomyocytes with doxorubicin and JNK inhibitor SP600125 (10 µM; 24 hours) reduced JNK phosphorylation and enhanced cell survival., suggesting that the baicalein protection against doxorubicin cardiotoxicity was mediated by JNK activation. Baicalein adjunct treatment confers anti-apoptotic protection against doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity without compromising its anti-cancer efficacy (Chang et al., 2011).

Prostate Cancer

There are four compounds capable of inhibiting prostate cancer cell proliferation in Scutellaria baicalensis: baicalein, wogonin, neobaicalein, and skullcapflavone. Comparisons of the cellular effects induced by the entire extract versus the four-compound combination produced comparable cell-cycle changes, levels of growth inhibition, and global gene expression profiles (r(2) = 0.79). Individual compounds exhibited anti-androgenic activities with reduced expression of the androgen receptor and androgen-regulated genes. In vivo, baicalein (20 mg/kg/d p.o.) reduced the growth of prostate cancer xenografts in nude mice by 55% at 2 weeks compared with placebo and delayed the average time for tumors to achieve a volume of approximately 1,000 mm(3) from 16 to 47 days (P < 0.001).

Most of the anti-cancer activities of S. baicalensis can be recapitulated with four purified constituents that function in part through inhibition of the androgen receptor signaling pathway (Bonham et al., 2005)

Cancer: Acute lymphocytic leukemia, lymphoma and myeloma

Action: Cell-cycle arrest, induces apoptosis

Scutellaria baicalensis (S.B.) is a widely used Chinese herbal medicine. S.B inhibited the growth of acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL), lymphoma and myeloma cell lines by inducing apoptosis and cell cycle arrest at clinically achievable concentrations. The anti-proliferative effectwas associated with mitochondrial damage, modulation of the Bcl family of genes, increased level of the CDK inhibitor p27KIP1 and decreased level of c-myc oncogene. HPLC analysis of S.B. showed it contains 21% baicalin and further studies confirmed it was the major anti-cancer component of S.B. Thus, Scutellaria baicalensis should be tested in clinical trials for these hematopoietic malignancies (Kumagai et al., 2007).

References

Bonham M, Posakony J, Coleman I, Montgomery B, Simon J, Nelson PS. (2005). Characterization of chemical constituents in Scutellaria baicalensis with antiandrogenic and growth-inhibitory activities toward prostate carcinoma. Clin Cancer Res, 11(10):3905-14.


Chang WH Chen CH Lu FJ. (2002). Different Effects of Baicalein, Baicalin and Wogonin on Mitochondrial Function, Glutathione Content and cell-cycle Progression in Human Hepatoma Cell Lines. Planta Med, 68(2):128-32. doi: 10.1055/s-2002-20246


Chang WT, Li J, Huang HH, et al. (2011). Baicalein protects against doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity by attenuation of mitochondrial oxidant injury .and JNK activation. J Cell Biochem. doi: 10.1002/jcb.23201.


Chen J, Li Z, Chen AY, Ye X, et al. (2013). Inhibitory effect of baicalin and baicalein on ovarian cancer cells. Int J Mol Sci, 14(3):6012-25. doi: 10.3390/ijms14036012.


Chen YC, Shen SC, Chen LG, Lee TJ, Yang LL. (2001). Wogonin, baicalin, and baicalein inhibition of inducible nitric oxide synthase and cyclooxygenase-2 gene expressions induced by nitric oxide synthase inhibitors and lipopolysaccharide. Biochem Pharmacol,61(11):1417-27. doi:10.1016/S0006-2952(01)00594-9


Cheng YH, Li LA, Lin P, et al. (2012). Baicalein induces G1 arrest in oral cancer cells by enhancing the degradation of cyclin D1 and activating AhR to decrease Rb phosphorylation. Toxicol Appl Pharmacol, 263(3):360-7. doi: 10.1016/j.taap.2012.07.010.


Chou CC, Pan SL, Teng CM, & Guh JH. (2003). Pharmacological evaluation of several major ingredients of Chinese herbal medicines in human hepatoma Hep3B cells. European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 19(5), 403-12.


Franek KJ, Zhou Z, Zhang WD, Chen WY. (2005). In vitro studies of baicalin alone or in combination with Salvia miltiorrhiza extract as a potential anti-cancer agent. Int J Oncol, 26(1):217-24.


Kim SJ, Kim HJ, Kim HR, et al. (2012). Anti-tumor actions of baicalein and wogonin in HT-29 human colorectal cancer cells. Molecular Medicine Reports, 6(6):1443-1449. doi: 10.3892/mmr.2012.1085.


Li-Weber M. (2009). New therapeutic aspects of flavones: The anti-cancer properties of Scutellaria and its main active constituents Wogonin, Baicalein and Baicalin. Cancer Treat Rev, 35(1):57-68. doi: 10.1016/j.ctrv.2008.09.005.


Ma Z, Otsuyama K, Liu S, et al. (2005). Baicalein, a component of Scutellaria radix from Huang-Lian-Jie-Du-Tang (HLJDT), leads to suppression of proliferation and induction of apoptosis in human myeloma cells. Blood, 105(8):3312-8. doi:10.1182/blood-2004-10-3915.


Wang Xf, Zhou Qm, Su Sb. (2010). Experimental study on Baicalein inhibiting the invasion and migration of human breast cancer cells. Zhong Guo Yao Li Xue Tong Bao, 26(6): 745-750.


Zhang XW, Li WF, Li WW, et al. (2011a). Protective effects of the aqueous extract of Scutellaria baicalensis against acrolein-induced oxidative stress in cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells. Pharm Biol, 49(3): 256–261. doi:10.3109/13880209.2010.501803.


Ye F, Xui L, Yi J, Zhang, W, Zhang DY. (2002). Anti-cancer activity of Scutellaria baicalensis and its potential mechanism. J Altern Complement Med, 8(5):567-72.


Zhang K, Lu J, Mori T, et al. (2011b). Baicalin increases VEGF expression and angiogenesis by activating the ERR{alpha}/PGC-1{alpha} pathway.[J]. Cardiovascular Research, 89(2):426-435.


Zhu Gq, Tang Lj, Wang L, Su Jj, et al. (2008). Study on Baicalin Induced Apoptosis of Human Breast Cancer Cell Line MDA-MB-231. An Hui Zhong Yi Xue Yuan Xue Bao, 27(2):20-23

Kumagai T, et al. (2007) Scutellaria baicalensis, a herbal medicine: Anti-proliferative and apoptotic activity against acute lymphocytic leukemia, lymphoma and myeloma cell lines. Leukemia Research 31 (2007) 523-530

Mollugin

Cancer: Breast, ovarian

Action: Multi-drug resistance, anti-inflammatory, blocks neurotoxicity

Mollugin originally isolated from Rubia cordifolia (L.) is a pharmacological compound for its anti-inflammation, anti-cancer, and anti-viral activity. Mollugin-caused inhibition of phenacetin O-deethylation was concentration-dependent in hierarchical linear models (HLMs), but not time-dependent. In addition, the Lineweaver-Burk plot indicated a typical competitive inhibition. Inhibitory effects of mollugin on human recombinant cDNA-expressed CYP1A1 and 1A2 were comparable. Taken together, the results suggested that mollugin might cause herb-drug interaction through selective inhibition of CYP1A2 in humans receiving herbal medications, including R. cordifolia (Kim et al., 2013).

MDR, Anti-inflammatory

Mollugin treatment significantly inhibited MDR1 expression by blocking MDR1 transcription. P-glycoprotein (P-gp), an important efflux transporter, is encoded by the MDR1 class of genes and is a central element of the multi-drug resistance (MDR) phenomenon in cancer cells. The suppression of MDR1 promoter activity and protein expression was mediated through mollugin-induced activation of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK). Furthermore, mollugin inhibited MDR1 expression through the suppression of NF-κB and cAMP-response element binding protein (CREB) activation. These results suggest that mollugin treatment enhanced suppression of P-gp expression by inhibiting the NF-κB signaling pathway and COX-2 expression, as well as attenuating cAMP-response element (CRE) transcriptional activity through AMPK activation (Tran et al., 2013).

Breast Cancer; Ovarian Cancer

Mollugin exhibited potent inhibitory effects on cancer cell proliferation, especially in HER2-overexpressing SK-BR-3 human breast cancer cells and SK-OV-3 human ovarian cancer cells in a dose- and time-dependent manner without affecting immortalized normal mammary epithelial cell line MCF-10A. Mollugin treatment caused a dose-dependent inhibition of HER2 gene expression at the transcriptional level, potentially in part through suppression of NF-κB activation. The combination of mollugin with a MEK1/2 inhibitor may be required in order to achieve optimal efficacy in HER2-overexpressing cancers.

These findings suggest that mollugin is a novel modulator of the HER2 pathway in HER2-overexpressing cancer cells with a potential role in the treatment and prevention of human breast and ovarian cancer with HER2 overexpression (Do et al., 2013).

Blocks Neurotoxicity, Anti-inflammatory

Mollugin also has effects as a neuro-protective agent in glutamate-induced neurotoxicity in the mouse hippocampal HT22 cell line and as an anti-inflammatory agent in lipopolysaccharide-induced microglial activation in BV2 cells. Mollugin showed potent neuro-protective effects against glutamate-induced neuro-toxicity and reactive oxygen species generation in mouse hippocampal HT22 cells.

In addition, the anti-inflammatory effects of mollugin were demonstrated by the suppression of pro-inflammatory mediators, including pro-inflammatory enzymes (inducible nitric oxide synthase and cyclooxygenase-2) and cytokines (tumor necrosis factor-α and interleukin-6). Furthermore, mollugin also activated the p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway both in HT22 and BV2 cells. These results suggest that mollugin may be a promising candidate for the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases related to neuroinflammation (Jeong et al., 2011).

References

Do MT, Hwang YP, Kim HG, et al. (2013). Mollugin inhibits proliferation and induces apoptosis by suppressing fatty acid synthase in HER2-overexpressing cancer cells. Journal of Cellular Physiology, 228(5):1087–1097. doi: 10.1002/jcp.24258.


Jeong GS, Lee DS, Kim DC, et al. (2011). Neuroprotective and anti-inflammatory effects of mollugin via up-regulation of heme oxygenase-1 in mouse hippocampal and microglial cells. Eur J Pharmacol, 654(3):226-34. doi: 10.1016/j.ejphar.2010.12.027.


Kim H, Choi HK, Jeong TC, et al. (2013). Selective inhibitory effects of mollugin on CYP1A2 in human liver microsomes. Food Chem Toxicol, 51:33-7. doi: 10.1016/j.fct.2012.09.013.


Tran TP, Kim HG, Choi JH, et al. (2013). Reversal of P-glycoprotein-mediated Multi-drug resistance is induced by mollugin in MCF-7/adriamycin cells. Phytomedicine. doi:10.1016/j.phymed.2013.01.014.

Emodin (See also Aloe-Emodin)

Cancer:
Breast, colon, liver, chemotherapy, myeloma, oral., pancreatic, hepatocellular carcinoma, lung, leukemia

Action: MDR-1, cell-cycle arrest

Emodin is an active natural anthraquinone derivative component of a traditional Chinese and Japanese medicine isolated from the root and rhizomes of Rheum palmatum L., Senna obtusifolia [(L.) H.S.Irwin & Barneby], Fallopia japonica [Houtt. (Ronse Decr.)], Kalimeris indica (L.) Sch.Bip., Ventilago madraspatana (Gaertn.), Rumex nepalensis (Spreng.), Fallopia multiflora [(Thunb.) Haraldson], Cassia occidentalis [(L.) Link], Senna siamea [(Lam.) Irwin et Barneby] and Acalypha australis (L.).

Aloe-emodin is an active natural anthraquinone derivative, and is found in the roots and rhizomes of numerous Chinese medicinal herbs (including Rheum palmatum L) and exhibits anti-cancer effects on many types of human cancer cell lines.

Administration of rhubarb (Emodin) can effectively reverse severe acute pancreatitis (SAP) by regulating the levels of IL-15 and IL-18 (Yu & Yang, 2013).

Pancreatic Cancer

Emodin is a tyrosine kinase inhibitor that has an inhibitory effect on mammalian cell-cycle modulation in specific oncogene-overexpressing cells. Recently, there has been great progress in the preclinical study of the anti-cancer mechanisms of emodin. A recent study revealed that emodin has therapeutic effects on pancreatic cancer through various anti-tumor mechanisms. Notably, the therapeutic efficacy of emodin in combination with chemotherapy was found to be higher than the comparable single chemotherapeutic regime, and the combination therapy also exhibited fewer side-effects (Wei et al., 2013).

Hepatocellular Carcinoma, Pancreatic, Breast, Colorectal and Lung Cancers, and Leukemia

Emodin is found as an active ingredient in different Chinese herbs including Rheum palmatum and Polygonam multiflorum, and has diuretic, vasorelaxant, anti-bacterial., anti-viral., anti-ulcerogenic, anti-inflammatory, and anti-cancer effects. The anti-inflammatory effects of emodin have been exhibited in various in vitro as well as in vivo models of inflammation including pancreatitis, arthritis, asthma, atherosclerosis and glomerulonephritis. As an anti-cancer agent, emodin has been shown to suppress the growth of various tumor cell lines including hepatocellular carcinoma, pancreatic, breast, colorectal., leukemia, and lung cancers. Emodin is a pleiotropic molecule capable of interacting with several major molecular targets including NF-κB, casein kinase II, HER2/neu, HIF-1α, AKT/mTOR, STAT3, CXCR4, topoisomerase II, p53, p21, and androgen receptors which are involved in inflammation and cancer (Shrimali et al., 2013).

Hepatocellular Carcinoma

It has been found that emodin induces apoptotic responses in the human hepatocellular carcinoma cell lines (HCC) Mahlavu, PLC/PRF/5 and HepG2. The addition of emodin to these three cell lines led to inhibition of growth in a time-and dose-dependent manner. Emodin generated reactive oxygen species (ROS) in these cells which brought about a reduction of the intracellular mitochondrial transmembrane potential (ΔΨ m), followed by the activation of caspase–9 and caspase–3, leading to DNA fragmentation and apoptosis.

Preincubation of hepatoma cell lines with the hydrogen peroxide-scavenging enzyme, catalase (CAT) and cyclosporin A (CsA), partially inhibited apoptosis. These results demonstrate that enhancement of generation of ROS, DeltaPsim disruption and caspase activation may be involved in the apoptotic pathway induced by emodin (Jing et al., 2002).

Colon Cancer

In in vitro study, emodin induced cell morphological changes, decreased the percentage of viability, induced G2/M phase arrest and increased ROS and Ca(2+) productions as well as loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨ(m)) in LS1034 cells. Emodin-triggered apoptosis was also confirmed by DAPI staining and these effects are concentration-dependent.

In in vivo study, emodin effectively suppressed tumor growth in tumor nude mice xenografts bearing LS1034. Overall, the potent in vitro and in vivo anti-tumor activities of emodin suggest that it might be developed for treatment of colon cancer in the future (Ma et al., 2012).

Myeloid Leukemia

It has been shown that emodin significantly induces cytotoxicity in the human myeloma cells through the elimination of myeloid cell leukemia 1 (Mcl-1). Emodin inhibited interleukin-6–induced activation of Janus-activated kinase 2 (JAK2) and phosphorylation of signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3), followed by the decreased expression of Mcl-1. Activation of caspase-3 and caspase-9 was triggered by emodin, but the expression of other anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 family members, except Mcl-1, did not change in the presence of emodin. To clarify the importance of Mcl-1 in emodin-induced apoptosis, the Mcl-1 expression vector was introduced into the human myeloma cells by electroporation. Induction of apoptosis by emodin was almost abrogated in Mcl-1–overexpressing myeloma cells as the same level as in parental cells, which were not treated with emodin. Emodin therefore inhibits interleukin-6–induced JAK2/STAT3 pathway selectively and induces apoptosis in myeloma cells via down-regulation of Mcl-1, which is a good target for treating myeloma. Taken together, these results show emodin as a new potent anti-cancer agent for the treatment of multiple myeloma patients (Muto et al., 2007).

Breast Cancer; Block HER-2

The mechanism by which emodin prevents breast cancer is unknown; however the product of the HER-2/neu proto-oncogene, HER2 has been proposed to be involved. The product of the HER-2/neu proto-oncogene, HER2, is the second member of the human epidermal growth factor receptor (HER) family of tyrosine kinase receptors and has been suggested to be a ligand orphan receptor. Amplification of the HER2 gene and overexpression of the HER2 protein induces cell transformation and has been demonstrated in 10% to 40% of human breast cancer. HER2 overexpression has been suggested to associate with tumor aggressiveness, prognosis and responsiveness to hormonal and cytotoxic agents in breast cancer patients. These findings indicate that HER2 is an appropriate target for tumor-specific therapies.

A number of approaches have been investigated: (1) a humanized monoclonal antibody against HER2, rhuMAbHER2 (trastuzumab), which is already approved for clinical use in the treatment of patients with metastatic breast cancer; (2) tyrosine kinase inhibitors, such as emodin, which block HER2 phosphorylation and its intracellullar signaling; (3) active immunotherapy, such as vaccination; and (4) heat shock protein (Hsp) 90-associated signal inhibitors, such as radicicol derivatives, which induce degradation of tyrosine kinase receptors, such as HER2 (Kurebayashi, 2001).

MDR

The effects of emodin on the nucleoside transport and multi-drug resistance in cancer cells has also been investigated. Nucleoside transport inhibition was determined by thymidine incorporation assay. The cytotoxicity to cancer cells was determined by MTT assay. The pump efflux activity and the expression of P glycoprotein were examined by flow cytometric assay. Emodin was active in the inhibition of nucleoside transport, with an IC 50 value of 9 9 µmol·L -1. Emodin markedly enhanced the cytotoxicity of 5 FU, MMC and MTX against human hepatoma BEL 7402 cells and partly reversed the multi-drug resistance in human breast cancer MCF 7/Adr cells.

Emodin inhibited P-gp pump efflux activity and reduced the expression of P gp in MCF 7/Adr cells. These findings provide a biological basis for the application of emodin as a biochemical modulator to potentiate the effects of anti-tumor drugs and reverse the multi-drug resistance in cancer cells (Jiang et al., 2009).

Cell-cycle Arrest

Large quantities of emodin were isolated from the roots of Rheum emodi and a library of novel emodin derivatives 2–15 were prepared to evaluate their anti-proliferative activities against HepG2, MDA-MB-231 and NIH/3T3 cells lines. The derivatives 3 and 12 strongly inhibited the proliferation of HepG2 and MDA-MB-231 cancer cell line with an IC50 of 5.6, 13.03 and 10.44, 5.027, respectively, which is comparable to marketed drug epirubicin (III). The compounds 3 and 12 were also capable of inducing cell-cycle arrest and caspase dependent apoptosis in HepG2 cell lines and exhibit DNA intercalating activity. These emodin derivatives hold promise for developing safer alternatives to the marketed epirubicin (Narender et al., 2013).

Cell-cycle Arrest; MDR1 & AZT

3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine (AZT) and emodin altered the cell-cycle distribution and led to an accumulation of cells in S phase. Meanwhile, the expression of MDR1 mRNA/p-gp protein was markedly decreased. These results show a synergistic growth-inhibitory effect of AZT and emodin in K562/ADM cells, which is achieved through S phase arrest. MDR1 might ultimately be responsible for these phenomena (Chen et al., 2013).

References

Chen P, Liu Y, Sun Y, et al. (2013). AZT and emodin exhibit synergistic growth-inhibitory effects on K562/ADM cells by inducing S phase cell-cycle arrest and suppressing MDR1 mRNA/p-gp protein expression. Pharm Biol.


Garg AK, Buchholz TA, Aggarwal BB. (2005). Chemo-sensitization and Radiosensitization of Tumors by Plant Polyphenols. Antioxid Redox Signal., 7(11-12):1630-47.


Jiang XF & Zhen YS. (1999). Reversal of Multi-drug resistance by emodin in cancer cells. Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica, 1999-03.


Jing X, Ueki N, Cheng J, Imanishi H, Hada T. (2002). Induction of apoptosis in hepatocellular carcinoma cell lines by emodin. Cancer Science, 93(8):874–882.


Kurebayashi J. (2001). Biological and clinical significance of HER2 overexpression in breast cancer. Breast Cancer, 8(1):45-51


Ma YS, Weng SW, Lin MW, et al. (2012). Anti-tumor effects of emodin on LS1034 human colon cancer cells in vitro and in vivo: Roles of apoptotic cell death and LS1034 tumor xenografts model. Food Chem Toxicol, 50(5): 1271–1278. doi: 10.1016/j.fct.2012.01.033.


Muto A, Hori M, Sasaki Y, et al. (2007). Emodin has a cytotoxic activity against human multiple myeloma as a Janus-activated kinase 2 inhibitor. Mol Cancer Ther. doi: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-06-0605.


Narender T, Sukanya P, Sharma K, et al. (2013). Preparation of novel anti-proliferative emodin derivatives and studies on their cell-cycle arrest, caspase dependent apoptosis and DNA binding interaction. Phytomedicine, 20(10):890-896.


Shrimali D, Shanmugam MK, Kumar AP, et al. (2013). Targeted abrogation of diverse signal transduction cascades by emodin for the treatment of inflammatory disorders and cancer. Cancer Lett:S0304-3835(13)00598-3. doi: 10.1016/j.canlet.2013.08.023.


Wei WT, Lin SZ, Liu DL, Wang ZH. (2013). The distinct mechanisms of the anti-tumor activity of emodin in different types of cancer (Review). Oncol Rep. doi: 10.3892/or.2013.2741.


Yu XW, Yang RZ. (2013). Effects of crude rhubarb on serum IL-15 and IL-18 levels in patients with severe acute pancreatitis. An Hui Yi Xue, 34(3): 285-287.

Biochanin A

Cancer: Breast

Action: Multi-drug resistance, anti-inflammatory, chemo-preventive

Biochanin is a derivative found in fruits, vegetables, plant-derived beverages, and herbal dietary supplements. It is isolated from a range of plants, including red clover, soy, alfalfa sprouts, and garbanzo beans (Trifolium pratense (L.), Glycine max [(L.) Merr.], Medicago sativa (L.), Cicer arietinum (L.))

MDR; Breast Cancer

Multi-drug resistance (MDR) is one of the most significant obstacles in cancer chemotherapy. One of the mechanisms involved in the development of MDR is the over-expression of P-glycoprotein (P-gp). It is widely known that natural compounds found in vegetables, fruits, plant-derived beverages and herbal dietary supplements not only have anti-cancer properties, but may also modulate P-gp activity. To further elucidate this, the effect of biochanin on P-gp function in human breast cancer cell lines, MCF-7 (sensitive) and MCF-7/ADR (resistant) was therefore examined.

The IC50 value of DNM in the resistant cells was about 22 times higher than that in the sensitive cells, indicating an over-expression of P-gp in the resistant cells, MCF-7/ADR. Biochanin was found to significantly decrease the IC50 value of DNM. Biochanin also showed a significant increase in [3H]-DNM accumulation, increasing by 454.3±19.5% in the resistant cells. Moreover, biochanin significantly decreased DNM efflux from MCF-7/ADR cells compared with the control. These results suggest that biochanin may reverse MDR by inhibiting the P-gp function (Chung et al., 2005).

Chemo-preventive

Biochanin A (BCA), a major isoflavone in red clover and many other legumes, has been reported to display estrogenic as well as cancer chemo-preventive properties. Ingested BCA is known to display low bioavailability due to poor solubility, extensive metabolism and rapid clearance. Esters of bioactive isoflavones are known to increase metabolic stability and bioavailability following local rather than systemic administration (Fokialakis et al., 2012).

Anti-inflammatory

Biochanin inhibits NF-κB activation not only by blocking the upstream IKK, but also PTK that phosphorylate tyrosine residues of IκBα. The double-edged sword effect of inhibition of NF-κB via inhibition of both serine/threonine kinase and PTK by biochanin might show useful therapeutic value against activities of cells that lead to tumorigenesis and inflammation (Manna et al., 2012).

References

Chung SY, Sung MK, Kim NH, et al. (2005). Inhibition of P-glycoprotein by natural products in human breast cancer cells. Archives of Pharmacal Research, 28(7):823-828. doi: 10.1007/BF02977349


Fokialakis N, Alexi X, Aligiannis N, et al. (2012). Ester and carbamate ester derivatives of Biochanin A: synthesis and in vitro evaluation of estrogenic and anti-proliferative activities. Bioorg Med Chem, 20(9):2962-70. doi: 10.1016/j.bmc.2012.03.012.


Manna SK. (2012). Double-edged sword effect of biochanin to inhibit nuclear factor kappaB: suppression of serine/threonine and tyrosine kinases. Biochem Pharmacol, 83(10):1383-92. doi: 10.1016/j.bcp.2012.02.011.

Shikonin

Cancer: Sarcoma-180, lung, melanoma, leukemia

Action: Anti-inflammatory, inhibits angiogenesis, MDR

Shiunko is a Kampo herbal ointment often used for the treatment of burns in Japan. It is mainly isolated from the root of Lithospermum erythrorhizon (Siebold & Zuccarini), which had been used for treating tumors and inflammation in China since the 5th century. The naphthoquinone pigment shikonin is the most important pharmacologically active substance in the dried root of Lithospermum erythrorhizon. In traditional Chinese medicine root extracts of Lithospermum erythrorhizon have been used to treat macular eruption, measles, sore throat, carbuncles, and burns (Chen et al., 2002). The anti-tumor effect of shikonin was first evidenced by its activity against murine sarcoma-180 (Sankawa et al., 1977).

Melanoma

It has been reported that shikonin, the main chemical ingredient of L. erythrorhizon is a novel inhibitor of angiogenesis. Angiogenesis is critical for tumor growth and inflammation. It inhibited tumor necrosis factor-alpha-induced and B16 melanoma-induced angiogenesis in mice and normal developmental angiogenesis in the yolk-sac membranes of chick embryos. Shikonin also inhibited proliferation and migration of endothelial cells in culture and network formation by endothelial cells on Matrigel in vitro. The dose-responsive study suggests that the mechanism of this inhibitory effect on angiogenesis involves the prevention of network formation by endothelial cells via blocking integrin alpha v beta 3 expression (Hisa et al., 1998).

Anti-inflammatory

Shikonin also reported to exert anti-inflammatory and anti-cancer effects both in vitro and in vivo. It has been found that proteasome was a molecular target of shikonin in tumor cells, but whether shikonin targets macrophage proteasome needs to be investigated. Consistently, shikonin accumulated IκB-α, an inhibitor of NF-κB, and ubiquitinated proteins in rat primary macrophage cultures, demonstrating that the proteasome is a target of shikonin under inflammatory conditions.

Shikonin also induced macrophage cell apoptosis and cell death. These results demonstrate for the first time that proteasome inhibition by shikonin contributes to its anti-inflammatory effect. The novel finding about macrophage proteasome as a target of shikonin suggests that this medicinal compound has great potential to be developed into an anti-inflammatory agent (Lu et al., 2011).

Leukemia, MDR

Shikonin has a strong cytotoxic effect on a wide variety of cancer cell lines, especially different types of leukemia and several known MDR cell lines. Microarray-based gene expression analysis of U937 leukemia cells suggested that the cytotoxicity of shikonin is based on the disruption of normal mitochondrial function, overproduction of ROS, inhibition of cytoskeleton formation, and finally induction of cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis. These effects were validated using in vitro cell culture experiments exploiting the specific natural fluorescence of shikonin and thereby identifying the possible primary cellular mechanism of shikonin's cytotoxicity (Wiench et al., 2012).

Lung Cancer

To better understand the anti-metastatic role of shikonin in lung cancer, the effect of shikonin on lung cancer cell proliferation was investigated, as well as its adhesion to extracellular matrices (ECM), migration and invasion in non-small-cell lung cancer A549 cells. Taken together, findings provide new evidence that shikonin suppresses lung cancer invasion and metastasis by inhibiting integrin β1 expression and the ERK1/2 signaling pathway. Integrin β1 facilitates cancer cell adhesion, migration and metastasis by activating intracellular signaling pathways including the ERK and PI3K signaling pathways, and it is in this way that shikonin exerts its anti-cancer activity (Wang et al., 2013).

MDR

Numerous previous studies have proven that shikonin and its analogs not only are highly tumoricidal but also can bypass drug-transporter and apoptotic defect mediated drug resistance. Cancer drug resistance is a major obstacle for the success of chemotherapy. Since most clinical anti-cancer drugs could induce drug resistance, it is desired to develop candidate drugs that are highly efficacious but incompetent to induce drug resistance. Shikonin was investigated for its ability as an inducer of cancer drug resistance. Different cell lines (K562, MCF-7, and a MDR cell line K562/Adr), after repeatedly treated with shikonin for 18 months, were assayed for drug resistance and gene expression profiling. After an 18-month treatment, cells only developed a mere 2-fold resistance to shikonin and a marginal resistance to cisplatin and paclitaxel, without cross-resistance to shikonin analogs and other anti-cancer agents. These merits make shikonin and its analogs potential candidates for cancer therapy with the advantages of avoiding induction of drug resistance and bypassing existing drug resistance (Wu et al., 2013).

References

Chen X, Yang L, Oppenheim JJ, Howard OMZ. (2002). Cellular pharmacology studies of shikonin derivatives. Phytotherapy Research, 16(3):199–209.


Hisa T, Kimura Y, Takada K, Suzuki F, Takigawa M. (1998). Shikonin, an ingredient of Lithospermum erythrorhizon, inhibits angiogenesis in vivo and in vitro. Anti-cancer Res, 18(2A):783-90.


Lu L, Qin A, Huang H, et al. (2011). Shikonin extracted from medicinal Chinese herbs exerts anti-inflammatory effect via proteasome inhibition. Eur J Pharmacol. 658(2–3):242–247.


Sankawa U, Ebizuka Y, Miyazaki T, et al. (1977). Anti-tumor activity of shikonin and its derivatives. Chemical and Pharmaceutical Bulletin, 25(9):2392–2395.


Wang H, Wu C, Wan S, et al. (2013). Shikonin attenuates lung cancer cell adhesion to extracellular matrix and metastasis by inhibiting integrin β 1 expression and the ERK1/2 signaling pathway. Toxicology, 308:104-12. doi: 10.1016/j.tox.2013.03.015. Epub 2013 Apr 4.


Wiench B, Eichhorn T, Malte Paulsen M, Efferth T. (2012). Shikonin Directly Targets Mitochondria and Causes Mitochondrial Dysfunction in Cancer Cells. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 2012:726025. doi:10.1155/2012/726025


Wu H, Xie J, Pan Q, et al. (2013). Anti-cancer agent shikonin is an incompetent inducer of cancer drug resistance. PLoS One, 8(1):e52706. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0052706.

Tanshinone II A & Tanshinone A (See also Cryptotanshinone)

Cancer:
Leukemia, prostate, breast, gastric, colorectal, nasopharyngeal carcinoma

Action: Chemo-sensitizer, cytostatic, cancer stem cells, anti-cancer, autophagic cell death, cell-cycle arrest

Anti-cancer

Tanshinone IIA and cryptotanshinone could induce CYP3A4 activity (Qiu et al., 2103).

Tanshinone II-A (Tan IIA) is the most abundant diterpene quinone isolated from Danshen (Salvia miltiorrhiza), which has been used in treating cardiovascular diseases for more than 2,000 years in China. Interest in its versatile protective effects in cardiovascular, metabolic, neurodegenerative diseases, and cancers has been growing over the last decade.

Tan IIA is a multi-target drug, whose molecular targets include transcription factors, scavenger receptors, ion channels, kinases, pro- and anti-apoptotic proteins, growth factors, inflammatory mediators, microRNA, and others. More recently, enhanced or synergistic effects can be observed when Tan IIA is used in combination therapy with cardio-protective and anti-cancer drugs (Xu & Liu, 2013).

Leukemia

The in vitro anti-proliferation and apoptosis-inducing effects of Tanshinone IIA on leukemia THP-1 cell lines and its mechanisms of action were investigated. MTT assay was used to detect the cell growth-inhibitory rate; cell apoptotic rate and the mitochondrial membrane potential (Deltapsim) were investigated by flow cytometry (FCM); apoptotic morphology was observed by Hoechst 33258 staining and DNA fragmentation analysis.

It was therefore concluded that Tanshinone IIA has significant growth inhibition effects on THP-1 cells by induction of apoptosis, and that Tanshinone IIA-induced apoptosis on THP-1 cells is mainly related to the disruption of Deltapsim and activation of caspase-3 as well as down-regulation of anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-2, survivin and up-regulation of pro-apoptotic protein Bax. The results indicate that Tanshinone IIA may serve as a potential anti-leukemia agent (Liu et al., 2009).

Prostate Cancer

Chiu et al. (2013) explored the mechanisms of cell death induced by Tan-IIA treatment in prostate cancer cells in vitro and in vivo. Results showed that Tan-IIA caused prostate cancer cell death in a dose-dependent manner, and cell-cycle arrest at G0/G1 phase was noted, in LNCaP cells. The G0/G1 phase arrest correlated with increased levels of CDK inhibitors (p16, p21 and p27) and decrease of the checkpoint proteins. Tan-IIA also induced ER stress in prostate cancer cells: activation and nuclear translocation of GADD153/CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein-homologous protein (CHOP) were identified, and increased expression of the downstream molecules GRP78/BiP, inositol-requiring protein-1α and GADD153/CHOP were evidenced. Blockage of GADD153/CHOP expression by siRNA reduced Tan-IIA-induced cell death in LNCaP cells.

Gastric Cancer

Tan IIA can reverse the malignant phenotype of SGC7901 gastric cancer cells, indicating that it may be a promising therapeutic agent.

Tan IIA (1, 5, 10 µg/ml) exerted powerful inhibitory effects on cell proliferation (P < 0.05, and P < 0.01), and this effect was time- and dose-dependent. FCM results showed that Tan IIA induced apoptosis of SGC7901 cells, reduced the number of cells in S phase and increased those in G0/G1 phase. Tan IIA also significantly increased the sensitivity of SGC7901 gastric cancer cells to ADR and Fu. Moreover, wound-healing and transwell assays showed that Tan IIA markedly decreased migratory and invasive abilities of SGC7901 cells (Xu et al., 2013).

Cell-cycle Arrest

MTT and SRB assays were applied to measure the effects of tanshinone A on cell viability. Cell-cycle distribution and apoptosis were assessed via flow cytometry using PI staining and the Annexin V/PI double staining method respectively. Changes to mitochondrial membrane potential was also detected by flow cytometry. The spectrophotometric method was utilized to detect changes of caspase-3 activity. Western blotting assay was used to evaluate the expression of Bcl-2, Bax and c-Myc proteins.

Results indicated that Tan-IIA displayed significant inhibitory effect on the growth of K562 cells in a dose- and time- dependent manner, and displayed only minimal damage to hepatic LO2 cells.

Tan-IIA could arrest K562 cells in the G0/G1 phase and induce apoptosis, decrease mitochondrial transmembrane potential, and the expressions of Bcl-2 and c-Myc proteins, increase the expression of Bax protein and activity of caspase-3. Accordingly, it was presumed that the induction of apoptosis may be through the endogenous pathway. Subsequently, tanshinone A could be a promising candidate in the development of a novel anti-tumor agent (Zhen et al., 2011).

Prostate Cancer, Chemo-sensitizer

Treatment with a combination of Chinese herbs and cytotoxic chemotherapies has shown a higher survival rate in clinical trials.

Tan-IIA displayed synergistic anti-tumor effects on human prostate cancer PC3 cells and LNCaP cells, when combined with cisplatin in vitro. Anti-proliferative effects were detected via MTT assay. Cell-cycle distribution and apoptosis were detected by flow cytometer. Protein expression was detected by Western blotting. The intracellular concentration of cisplatin was detected by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC).

Results demonstrated that tanshinone II A significantly enhanced the anti-proliferative effects of cisplatin on human prostate cancer PC3 cells and LNCaP cells with an increase in the intracellular concentration of cisplatin. These effects were correlated with cell-cycle arrest at the S phase and induction of cell apoptosis. Apoptosis could potentially be achieved through the death receptor and mitochondrial pathways, decreased expression of Bcl-2.

Collectively, results indicated that the combination of tanshinone II A and cisplatin had a better treatment effect, in vitro, not only on androgen-dependent LNCaP cells but also on androgen-independent PC3 cells (Hou, Xu, Hu, & Xie, 2013).

Autophagic Cell Death, CSCs

Tan IIA significantly increased the expression of microtubule-associated protein light chain 3 (LC3) II as a hallmark of autophagy in Western blotting and immunofluorescence staining. Tan IIA augmented the phosphorylation of adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK) and attenuated the phosphorylation of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) and p70 S6K in a dose-dependent manner.Tan IIA dramatically activated the extracellular signal regulated kinase (ERK) signaling pathway including Raf, ERK and p90 RSK in a dose-dependent and time-dependent manner. Consistently, ERK inhibitor PD184352 suppressed LC3-II activation induced by Tan IIA, whereas PD184352 and PD98059 did not affect poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage and sub-G1 accumulation induced by Tan IIA in KBM-5 leukemia cells.

Tan IIA induces autophagic cell death via activation of AMPK and ERK and inhibition of mTOR and p70 S6K in KBM-5 cells as a potent natural compound for leukemia treatment (Yun et al., 2013).

Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are maintained by inflammatory cytokines and signaling pathways. Tanshinone IIA (Tan-IIA) possesses anti-cancer and anti-inflammatory activities. The purpose of this study is to confirm the growth inhibition effect of Tan-IIA on human breast CSCs growth in vitro and in vivo and to explore the possible mechanism of its activity. After Tan-IIA treatment, cell proliferation and mammosphere formation of CSCs were decreased significantly; the expression levels of IL-6, STAT3, phospho-STAT3 (Tyr705), NF-κBp65 in nucleus and cyclin D1 proteins were decreased significantly; the tumor growth and mean tumor weight were reduced significantly.

Tan-IIA has the potential to target and kill CSCs, and can inhibit human breast CSCs growth both in vitro and in vivo through attenuation of IL-6/STAT3/NF-kB signaling pathways (Lin et al., 2013).

Colorectal Cancer

Tan II-A can effectively inhibit tumor growth and angiogenesis of human colorectal cancer via inhibiting the expression level of COX-2 and VEGF. Angiogenesis plays a significant role in colorectal cancer (CRC) and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) appears to be involved with multiple aspects of CRC angiogenesis (Zhou et al., 2012). The results showed that Tan IIA inhibited the proliferation of inflammation-related colon cancer cells HCT116 and HT-29 by decreasing the production of inflammatory cytokines tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α) and interleukin 6 (IL-6), which are generated by macrophage RAW264.7 cell line.

Treatment with TanshinoneIIA prevented increased PU.1, a transcriptional activator of miR-155, and hence increased miR-155, whereas aspirin could not. These findings support that the interruption of signal conduction between activated macrophages and colon cancer cells could be considered as a new therapeutic strategy and miR-155 could be a potential target for the prevention of inflammation-related cancer (Tu et al., 2012).

Breast Cancer

The proliferation rate of T47D and MDA-MB-231 cells influenced by 1×10-6 mol·L-1 and 1×10-7 mol·L-1 Tanshinone IIA was analyzed by MTT assay. Estrogen receptor antagonist ICI182, 780 was employed as a tool. Level of ERα and ERβ mRNA in T47D cells was quantified by Real-time RT-PCR assay. Expression of ERα and ERβ protein was measured by flow cytometry. The proliferation rates of T47D cells treated with Tanshinone IIA decreased significantly. Such effects could be partly blocked by ICI182, 780.

Meanwhile, the proliferation rates of MDA-MB-231 cells treated with Tanshinone IIA decreased much more dramatically. Real-time RT-PCR and flow cytometry results showed that Tanshinone IIA could induce elevation of ERα and ERβ, especially ERα mRNA, and protein expression level in T47D cells. Tanshinone IIA shows inhibitory effects on proliferation of breast cancer cell lines (Zhao et al., 2010).

The role of cell adhesion molecules in the process of inflammation has been studied extensively, and these molecules are critical components of carcinogenesis and cancer metastasis. This study investigated the effect of tanshinone I on cancer growth, invasion and angiogenesis on human breast cancer cells MDA-MB-231, both in vitro and in vivo. Tanshinone I dose-dependently inhibited ICAM-1 and VCAM-1 expressions in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) that were stimulated with TNF-α for 6 h.

Additionally, reduction of tumor mass volume and decrease of metastasis incidents by tanshinone I were observed in vivo. In conclusion, this study provides a potential mechanism for the anti-cancer effect of tanshinone I on breast cancer cells, suggesting that tanshinone I may serve as an effective drug for the treatment of breast cancer (Nizamutdinova et al., 2008).

Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma

To investigate anti-cancer effect and potential mechanism of tanshinone II(A) (Tan II(A)) on human nasopharyngeal carcinoma cell line CNE cells, the anti-proliferative effect of Tan II(A) on CNE cells was evaluated by morphological examination, cell growth curves, colonial assay and MTT assay. Tan II(A) could inhibit CNE cell proliferation in dose- and time-dependent manner. After treatment with Tan II(A), intracellular Ca2+ concentration of CNE cells was increased, mitochondria membrane potential of the cells was decreased, relative mRNA level of Bad and MT-1A was up-regulated. Tan II(A) had an anti-cancer effect on CNE cells through apoptosis via a calcineurin-dependent pathway and MT-1A down-regulation, and may be the next generation of chemotherapy (Dai et al., 2011).

References

Chiu SC, Huang SY, Chen SP, et al. (2013). Tanshinone IIA inhibits human prostate cancer cells growth by induction of endoplasmic reticulum stress in vitro and in vivo. Prostate Cancer Prostatic Dis. doi: 10.1038/pcan.2013.38.


Dai Z, Huang D, Shi J, Yu L, Wu Q, Xu Q. (2011). Apoptosis inducing effect of tanshinone II(A) on human nasopharyngeal carcinoma CNE cells. Zhongguo Zhong Yao Za Zhi, 36(15):2129-33.


Hou LL, Xu QJ, Hu GQ, Xie SQ. (2013). Synergistic anti-tumor effects of tanshinone II A in combination with cisplatin via apoptosis in the prostate cancer cells. Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica, 48(5), 675-679.


Lin C, Wang L, Wang H, et al. (2013). Tanshinone IIA inhibits breast cancer stem cells growth in vitro and in vivo through attenuation of IL-6/STAT3/NF-kB signaling pathways. J Cell Biochem, 114(9):2061-70. doi: 10.1002/jcb.24553.


Liu JJ, Zhang Y, Lin DJ, Xiao RZ. (2009). Tanshinone IIA inhibits leukemia THP-1 cell growth by induction of apoptosis. Oncol Rep, 21(4):1075-81.


Nizamutdinova IT, Lee GW, Lee JS, et al. (2008). Tanshinone I suppresses growth and invasion of human breast cancer cells, MDA-MB-231, through regulation of adhesion molecules. Carcinogenesis, 29(10):1885-1892. doi:10.1093/carcin/bgn151


Qiu F, Jiang J, Ma Ym, et al. (2013). Opposite Effects of Single-Dose and Multidose Administration of the Ethanol Extract of Danshen on CYP3A in Healthy Volunteers. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 2013(2013) http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/730734


Tu J, Xing Y, Guo Y, et al. (2012). TanshinoneIIA ameliorates inflammatory microenvironment of colon cancer cells via repression of microRNA-155. Int Immunopharmacol, 14(4):353-61. doi: 10.1016/j.intimp.2012.08.015.


Xu M, Cao FL, Li NY, et al. (2013). Tanshinone IIA reverses the malignant phenotype of SGC7901 gastric cancer cells. Asian Pac J Cancer Prev, 14(1):173-7.


Xu S, Liu P. (2013). Tanshinone II-A: new perspectives for old remedies. Expert Opin Ther Pat, 23(2):149-53. doi: 10.1517/13543776.2013.743995.


Yun SM, Jung JH, Jeong SJ, et al. (2013). Tanshinone IIA Induces Autophagic Cell Death via Activation of AMPK and ERK and Inhibition of mTOR and p70 S6K in KBM-5 Leukemia Cells. Phytother Res. doi: 10.1002/ptr.5015.


Zhen X, Cen J, Li YM, Yan F, Guan T, Tang, XZ. (2011). Cytotoxic effect and apoptotic mechanism of tanshinone A, a novel tanshinone derivative, on human erythroleukemic K562 cells. European Journal of Pharmacology, 667(1-3), 129-135. doi: 10.1016/j.ejphar.2011.06.004.


Zhao PW, Niu JZ, Wang JF, Hao QX, Yu J, et al. (2010). Research on the inhibitory effect of Tanshinone IIA on breast cancer cell proliferation. Zhong Guo Yao Li Xue Tong Bao, 26(7):903-906.


Zhou LH, Hu Q, Sui H, et al. (2012). Tanshinone II–a inhibits angiogenesis through down regulation of COX-2 in human colorectal cancer. Asian Pac J Cancer Prev, 13(9):4453-8.

Luteolin

Cancer: Colorectal., ovarian, pancreatic

Action: Anti-inflammatory, immunomodulatory, radio-sensitizer, chemo-sensitizer

Luteolin is a flavonoid found in many plants and foods, including Terminalia chebula (Retz.), Prunella vulgaris (L.) and Perilla frutescens [(L.) Britton].

Luteolin is contained in Ocimum sanctum L . or Ocimum tenuiflorum L , commonly known as Holy Basil in English or Tulsi in various Indian languages, which is an important medicinal plant in the various traditional and folk systems of medicine in Southeast Asia. Scientific studies have shown it to possess anti-inflammatory, analgesic, anti-pyretic, anti-diabetic, hepato-protective, hypolipidemic, anti-stress, and immunomodulatory activities. It has been found to prevent chemical-induced skin, liver, oral., and lung cancers and mediates these effects by increasing the anti-oxidant activity, altering the gene expressions, inducing apoptosis, and inhibiting angiogenesis and metastasis.

Colon Cancer

Luteolin inhibited cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK)4 and CDK2 activity, resulting in G1 arrest with a concomitant decrease of phosphorylation of retinoblastoma protein. Activities of CDK4 and CDK2 decreased within 2 hours after luteolin treatment, with a 38% decrease in CDK2 activity (P < 0.05) observed in cells treated with 40 µmol/l luteolin. Luteolin also promoted G2/M arrest at 24 hours post-treatment by down-regulating cyclin B1 expression and inhibiting cell division cycle (CDC)2 activity. Luteolin promoted apoptosis with increased activation of caspases 3, 7, and 9 and enhanced poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage and decreased expression of p21CIP1/WAF1, survivin, Mcl-1, Bcl-xL, and Mdm-2. Lim et al. (2007) demonstrated that luteolin promotes both cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis in the HT-29 colon cancer cell line, providing insight about the mechanisms underlying its anti-tumorigenic activities.

Radio-protective

The aqueous extract of Perilla frutescens has been shown to protect mice against γ-radiation-induced sickness and mortality and to selectively protect the normal tissues against the tumoricidal effects of radiation. The chemo-preventive and radio-protective properties of Perilla emphasize aspects that warrant future research to establish its activity and utility in cancer prevention and treatment (Baliga et al., 2013).

Anti-inflammatory

Pre-treatment of RAW 264.7 macrophages with luteolin, luteolin-7-glucoside, quercetin, and the isoflavonoid genistein inhibited both the LPS-stimulated TNF-α and interleukin-6 release, whereas eriodictyol and hesperetin only inhibited TNF-α release. From the compounds tested, luteolin and quercetin were the most potent in inhibiting cytokine production with an IC50 of less than 1 and 5 µM for TNF-α release, respectively. Moreover, luteolin inhibited LPS-induced phosphorylation of Akt. Treatment of macrophages with LPS resulted in increased IκB-α phosphorylation and reduced the levels of IκB-α. Pre-treatment of cells with luteolin abolished the effects of LPS on IκB-α.

Xagorari et al. (2001) concluded that luteolin inhibits protein tyrosine phosphorylation, nuclear factor-κB-mediated gene expression and pro-inflammatory cytokine production in murine macrophages.

Anti-inflammatory; Neuroinflammation

Pre-treatment of primary murine microglia and BV-2 microglial cells with luteolin inhibited LPS-stimulated IL-6 production at both the mRNA and protein levels. Whereas luteolin had no effect on the LPS-induced increase in NF-κB DNA binding activity, it markedly reduced AP-1 transcription factor binding activity. Consistent with this finding, luteolin did not inhibit LPS-induced degradation of IκB-α but inhibited JNK phosphorylation.

Luteolin consumption reduced LPS-induced IL-6 in plasma 4 hours after injection. Furthermore, luteolin decreased the induction of IL-6 mRNA by LPS in the hippocampus but not in the cortex or cerebellum. Taken together, these data suggest luteolin inhibits LPS-induced IL-6 production in the brain by inhibiting the JNK signaling pathway and activation of AP-1 in microglia. Thus, luteolin may be useful for mitigating neuroinflammation (Jang et al., 2008).

Immunostimulatory and Anti-inflammatory

Luteolin (Lut) possesses significant anti-inflammatory activity in well-established models of acute and chronic inflammation, such as xylene-induced ear edema in mice (ED50= 107 mg/ kg), carrageenin-induced swellingof the ankle, acetic acid-induced pleurisy and croton oil-induced gaseous pouch granuloma in rats. Lut had a marked inhibitory effect on the inflammatory exudation, but did not affect the number of leucocytes. Its combined immunostimulatory and anti-inflammatory activity, and inhibitory effect upon immediate hypersensitive response, provide the pharmacologic bases for the beneficial effects of Lut in the treatment of chronic bronchitis (Chen et al., 1986).

Anti-inflammatory

Luteolin dose-dependently inhibited the expression and production of those inflammatory genes and mediators in macrophages stimulated with lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Semi-quantitative reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay further confirmed the suppression of LPS-induced TNF- α, IL-6, iNOS and COX-2 gene expression by luteolin at a transcriptional level. Luteolin also reduced the DNA binding activity of nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-κB) in LPS-activated macrophages.

In addition, luteolin significantly inhibited the LPS-induced DNA binding activity of activating protein-1 (AP-1). It was also found that luteolin attenuated the LPS-mediated protein kinase B (Akt) and IKK phosphorylation, as well as reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. In sum, these data suggest that, by blocking NF-κB and AP-1 activation, luteolin acts to suppress the LPS-elicited inflammatory events in mouse alveolar macrophages, and this effect was mediated, at least in part, by inhibiting the generation of reactive oxygen species. These observations suggest a possible therapeutic application of this agent for treating inflammatory disorders in the lung (Chen et al., 2007).

Pancreatic Cancer; Chemo-enhancing

Simultaneous treatment or pre-treatment (0, 6, 24 and 42h) of flavonoids and chemotherapeutic drugs and various concentrations (0-50µM) were assessed using the MTS cell proliferation assay. Pre-treatment for 24 hours with 13µM of either Apigenin or Luteolin, followed by Gem for 36 h was optimal to inhibit cell proliferation.

Pre-treatment of cells with 11-19µM of either flavonoid for 24 hours resulted in 59%–73% growth inhibition when followed by Gem (10µM, 36 hours). Lut (15µM, 24 hours) pre-treatment followed by Gem (10µM, 36h), significantly decreased protein expression of nuclear GSK-3β and NF-κB p65 and increased pro-apoptotic cytosolic cytochrome c. Pre-treatment of human pancreatic cancer cells BxPC-3 with low concentrations of Lut effectively aid in the anti-proliferative activity of chemotherapeutic drugs (Johnson et al., 2013).

Ovarian Cancer

Recent studies further indicate that luteolin potently inhibits VEGF production and suppresses ovarian cancer cell metastasis in vitro. Lastly, oridonin and wogonin were suggested to suppress ovarian CSCs as is reflected by down-regulation of the surface marker EpCAM.

Unlike NSAIDS (non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs), well-documented clinical data for phyto-active compounds are lacking. In order to evaluate objectively the potential benefit of these compounds in the treatment of ovarian cancer, strategically designed, large scale studies are warranted (Chen et al., 2012).

Chemo-sensitizer

The sensitization effect of luteolin on cisplatin-induced apoptosis is p53 dependent, as such effect is only found in p53 wild-type cancer cells but not in p53 mutant cancer cells. Moreover, knockdown of p53 by small interfering RNA made p53 wild-type cancer cells resistant to luteolin and cisplatin. The critical role of c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase (JNK) was identified in regulation of p53 protein stability: luteolin activates JNK, and JNK then stabilizes p53 via phosphorylation, leading to reduced ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation.

An in vivo nude mice xenograft model confirmed that luteolin enhanced the cancer therapeutic activity of cisplatin via p53 stabilization and accumulation. In summary, data from this study reveal a novel molecular mechanism involved in the anti-cancer effects of luteolin and support its potential clinical application as a chemo-sensitizer in cancer therapy (Shi et al., 2007).

Breast Cancer; Chemo-sensitzer

Luteolin is a flavonoid that has been identified in many plant tissues and exhibits chemo-preventive or chemo-sensitizing properties against human breast cancer. However, the oncogenic molecules in human breast cancer cells that are inhibited by luteolin treatment have not been identified.

Relatively high levels of cyclin E2 (CCNE2) protein expression were detected in tamoxifen-resistant (TAM-R) MCF-7 cells. These results showed that the level of CCNE2 protein expression was specifically inhibited in luteolin-treated (5µM) TAM-R cells, either in the presence or absence of 4-OH-TAM (100nM). Combined treatment with 4-OH-TAM and luteolin synergistically sensitized the TAM-R cells to 4-OH-TAM. The results of this study suggest that luteolin can be used as a chemo-sensitizer to target the expression level of CCNE2 and that it could be a novel strategy to overcome TAM resistance in breast cancer patients (Tu et al., 2013).

References

Baliga MS, Jimmy R, Thilakchand KR, et al. (2013). Ocimum sanctum L (Holy Basil or Tulsi) and its phytochemicals in the prevention and treatment of cancer. Nutr Cancer, 65(1):26-35. doi: 10.1080/01635581.2013.785010.

Chen CY, Peng WH, Tsai KD and Hsu SL. (2007). Luteolin suppresses inflammation-associated gene expression by blocking NF- κ B and AP-1 activation pathway in mouse alveolar macrophages. Life Sciences, 81(23-24):1602-1614. doi:10.1016/j.lfs.2007.09.028

Chen MZ, Jin WZ, Dai LM, Xu SY. (1986). Effect of luteolin on inflammation and immune function. Chinese Journal of Pharmacology and Toxicology, 1986-01.

Chen SS, Michael A, Butler-Manuel SA. (2012). Advances in the treatment of ovarian cancer: a potential role of anti-inflammatory phytochemicals. Discov Med, 13(68):7-17.

Jang S, Kelley KW, Johnson RW. (2008). Luteolin reduces IL-6 production in microglia by inhibiting JNK phosphorylation and activation of AP-1. PNAS, 105(21):7534-7539

Johnson JL, Gonzalez de Mejia E. (2013). Interactions between dietary flavonoids apigenin or luteolin and chemotherapeutic drugs to potentiate anti-proliferative effect on human pancreatic cancer cells, in vitro. Food Chem Toxicol, S0278-6915(13)00491-2. doi: 10.1016/j.fct.2013.07.036.

Lim DY, Jeong Y, Tyner Al., Park JHY. (2007). Induction of cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis in HT-29 human colon cancer cells by the dietary compound luteolin. Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol, 292: G66-G75. doi:10.1152/ajpgi.00248.2006.

Shi R, Huang Q, Zhu X, et al. (2007). Luteolin sensitizes the anti-cancer effect of cisplatin via c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase-mediated p53 phosphorylation and stabilization. Molecular Cancer Therapeutics, 6(4):1338-1347. doi: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-06-0638.

Tu SH, Ho CT, Liu MF, et al. (2013). Luteolin sensitizes drug-resistant human breast cancer cells to tamoxifen via the inhibition of cyclin E2 expression. Food Chem, 141(2):1553-61. doi: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2013.04.077.

Xagorari A, Papapetropoulos A, Mauromatis A, et al. (2001). Luteolin inhibits an endotoxin-stimulated phosphorylation cascade and pro-inflammatory cytokine production in macrophages. JPET, 296(1):181-187.

Evodiamine

Cancer: Pancreatic, gastric, breast; ER+, ER-, lung

Action: Inhibits NF- κB, inhibits metastasis, increases intracellular ROS, apoptosis, cell-cycle arrest, anti-cancer, MDR

Evodiamine, a naturally occurring indole alkaloid, is one of the main bioactive ingredients of Evodia rutaecarpa [(Juss.) Benth.] (alkaloidal component of the extract). With respect to the pharmacological actions of evodiamine, more attention has been paid to beneficial effects in insults involving cancer, obesity, nociception, inflammation, cardiovascular diseases, Alzheimer's disease, infectious diseases and thermo-regulative effects. Evodiamine has evolved a superior ability to bind various proteins (Yu et al., 2013). Evodiamine exhibits anti-proliferative, anti-metastatic, and apoptotic activities.

Anti-cancer, MDR

Evodiamine possesses anti-anxiety, anti-obesity, anti-nociceptive, anti-inflammatory, anti-allergic, and anti-cancer effects. As well, it has thermoregulation, protection of myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury and vessel-relaxing activities (Kobayashi, 2003; Shin et al., 2007; Ko et al., 2007; Ji, 2011). Evodiamine exhibits anti-cancer activities both in vitro and in vivo by inducing cell-cycle arrest or apoptosis, and inhibiting angiogenesis, invasion, and metastasis in a variety of cancer cell lines (Ogasawara et al., 2001; Ogasawara et al., 2002; Fei et al., 2003; Shyu et al., 2006). It presents anti-cancer potentials at micromolar concentrations and even at the nanomolar level in some cell lines in vitro (Lee et al., 2006; Wang, Li, & Wang, 2010). Evodiamine also stimulates autophagy, which serves as a survival function (Yang et al., 2008). Compared with other compounds, evodiamine is less toxic to normal human cells, such as human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (Fei et al., 2003; Zhang et al., 2004). It also inhibits the proliferation of adriamycin-resistant human breast cancer NCI/ADR-RES cells both in vitro and in Balb-c/nude mice (Liao et al., 2005).

Lung Cancer, Cell-cycle Arrest

Evodiamine (10  mg/kg) administrated orally twice daily significantly inhibits   tumor growth (Liao et al., 2005). Moreover, treatment with 10 mg/kg evodiamine from the 6th day after tumor inoculation into mice reduces lung metastasis and does not affect the body weight of mice during the experimental period (Ogasawara et al., 2001).

Cell-cycle Arrest

Evodiamine inhibits TopI enzyme, forms the DNA covalent complex with a similar concentration to that of irinotecan, and induces DNA damage (Chan et al., 2009; Tsai et al., 2010; Dong et al., 2010). However, TopI may not be the main target of this compound. Cancer cells treated with evodiamine exhibit G 2 / M phase arrest (Kan et al., 2004; Huang et al., 2004; Liao et al., 2005) rather than S phase arrest, which is not consistent with the mechanism of classic TopI inhibitors, such as irinotecan. Therefore, other targets aside from TopI may also be important for realizing the anti-cancer potentials of evodiamine. This statement is supported by the fact that evodiamine has effects on tubulin polymerization (Huang et al., 2004).

Increases Intracellular ROS, Apoptosis

Exposure to evodiamine rapidly increases intracellular ROS followed by an onset of mitochondrial depolarization (Yang et al., 2007). The generation of ROS and nitric oxide acts in synergy and triggers mitochondria-dependent apoptosis (Yang et al., 2008). Evodiamine also induces caspase-dependent and caspase-independent apoptosis, down-regulates Bcl-2 expression, and up-regulates Bax expression in some cancer cells (Zhang et al., 2003; Lee et al., 2006). The phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt/caspase and Fas ligand (Fas-L)/NF-κB signaling pathways might account for evodiamine-induced cell death. Moreover, these signals could be increased by the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway (Wang, Li, & Wang, 2010).

Inhibits Metastasis

Evodiamine has a marked inhibitory activity on tumor cell migration in vitro. When evodiamine at 10 mg/kg was administered into mice from the 6th day after tumor inoculation, the number of tumor nodules in lungs was decreased by 48% as compared to control. The inhibition rate was equivalent to that produced by cisplatin. Results suggest that evodiamine may be regarded as a promising agent in tumor metastasis therapy (Ogasawara et al., 2005).

Inhibits NF-κB

Evodiamine inhibited tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-induced Akt activation and its association with IKK. This down-regulation potentiated the apoptosis induced by cytokines and chemotherapeutic agents and suppressed TNF-induced invasive activity. Overall, these results indicate that evodiamine inhibits both constitutive and induced NF-κB activation and NF-κB-regulated gene expression (Takada et al., 2005).

Breast Cancer

Endocrine sensitivity, assessed by the expression of estrogen receptor (ER), has long been the predict factor to guide therapeutic decisions. Tamoxifen has been the most successful hormonal treatment in endocrine-sensitive breast cancer. However, in estrogen-insensitive cancer tamoxifen showed less effectiveness than in estrogen-sensitive cancer. It is interesting to develop new drugs against both hormone-sensitive and insensitive tumor. In this present study Wang et al. (2013) examined anti-cancer effects of evodiamine extracted from the Chinese herb, Evodiae fructus, in estrogen-dependent and -independent human breast cancer cells, MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cells, respectively.

Breast Cancer; ER+, ER-

The expression of ER α and β in protein and mRNA levels was down-regulated by evodiamine according to data from immunoblotting and RT-PCR analysis. Overall, results indicate that evodiamine mediates degradation of ER and induces caspase-dependent pathway leading to inhibition of proliferation of breast cancer cell lines. It suggests that evodiamine may in part mediate through ER-inhibitory pathway to inhibit breast cancer cell proliferation.

Evodiamine (10 mg/kg) significantly reduced tumor growth and pulmonary metastasis. In vitro, evodiamine inhibited cell migration and invasion abilities through down-regulation of MMP-9, urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) and uPAR expression. Evodiamine-induced G0/G1 arrest and apoptosis were associated with a decrease in Bcl-2, cyclin D1 and cyclin-dependent kinase 6 (CDK6) expression and an increase in Bax and p27Kip1 expression (Du et al., 201).

Gastric Cancer

A study by Rasul et al. (2012) was conducted to investigate the synchronized role of autophagy and apoptosis in evodiamine-induced cytotoxic activity on SGC-7901 human gastric adenocarcinoma cells and further to elucidate the underlying molecular mechanisms. Evodiamine significantly inhibited the proliferation of SGC-7901 cells and induced G2/M phase cell-cycle arrest.

Evodiamine-induced autophagy is partially involved in the death of SGC-7901 cells which was confirmed by using the autophagy inhibitor 3-methyladenine (3-MA). Evodiamine has therapeutic potential against cancers.

Pancreatic Cancer

In vitro application of the combination therapy triggered significantly higher frequency of pancreatic cancer cells apoptosis, inhibited the activities of PI3K, Akt, PKA, mTOR and PTEN, and decreased the activation of NF-κB and expression of NF- κB-regulated products. Evodiamine can augment the therapeutic effect of gemcitabine in pancreatic cancer through direct or indirect negative regulation of the PI3K/Akt pathway (Wei et al., 2012).

References

Chan ALF, Chang WS, Chen LM et al. (2009). Evodiamine stabilizes topoisomerase I-DNA cleavable complex to inhibit topoisomerase I activity. Molecules, (14):4:1342–1352.


Dong G, Sheng C, Wang CS, et al. (2010). Selection of evodiamine as a novel topoisomerase i inhibitor by structure-based virtual screening and hit optimization of evodiamine derivatives as anti-tumor agents. Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, 53(21):7521–7531.


Du J, Wang XF, Zhou QM, et al. (2013). Evodiamine induces apoptosis and inhibits metastasis in MDA “American Typewriter”; “American Typewriter”;‑ MB-231 human breast cancer cells in vitro and in vivo. Oncol Rep, 30(2):685-94. doi: 10.3892/or.2013.2498.


Fei XF, Wang BX, T. Li TJ et al. (2003). Evodiamine, a constituent of Evodiae Fructus, induces anti-proliferating effects in tumor cells. Cancer Science, 94(1):92–98.


Huang YC, Guh JH, Teng CM. (2004). Induction of mitotic arrest and apoptosis by evodiamine in human leukemic T-lymphocytes. Life Sciences, 75(1):35–49.


Ji YB. (2011). Active Ingredients of Traditional Chinese Medicine: Pharmacology and Application. People's Medical Publishing House Co., LTD. Connecticut USA


Kan SF, Huang WJ, Lin LC, Wang PS. (2004). Inhibitory effects of evodiamine on the growth of human prostate cancer cell line LNCaP. International Journal of Cancer, 110(5):641–651.


Ko HC, Wang YH, Liou KT et al. (2007). Anti-inflammatory effects and mechanisms of the ethanol extract of Evodia rutaecarpa and its bioactive components on neutrophils and microglial cells. European Journal of Pharmacology, 555(2-3):211–217.


Kobayashi Y. (2003). The nociceptive and anti-nociceptive effects of evodiamine from fruits of Evodia rutaecarpa in mice. Planta Medica, 69(5):425–428.


Lee TJ, Kim EJ, Kim S et al. (2006). Caspase-dependent and caspase-independent apoptosis induced by evodiamine in human leukemic U937 cells. Molecular Cancer Therapeutics, 5(9):2398–2407.


Liao CH, Pan SL, Guh JH et al. (2005). Anti-tumor mechanism of evodiamine, a constituent from Chinese herb Evodiae fructus, in human multiple-drug resistant breast cancer NCI/ADR-RES cells in vitro and in vivo. Carcinogenesis, 26(5):968–975.


Ogasawara M, Matsubara T, Suzuki H. (2001). Inhibitory effects of evodiamine on in vitro invasion and experimental lung metastasis of murine colon cancer cells. Biological and Pharmaceutical Bulletin, 24(8):917–920.


Ogasawara M, Matsunaga T, Takahashi S, Saiki I, Suzuki H. (2002). Anti-invasive and metastatic activities of evodiamine. Biological and Pharmaceutical Bulletin, 25(11):1491–1493.


Rasul A, Yu B, Zhong L, et al. (2012). Cytotoxic effect of evodiamine in SGC-7901 human gastric adenocarcinoma cells via simultaneous induction of apoptosis and autophagy. Oncol Rep, 27(5):1481-7. doi: 10.3892/or.2012.1694


Shin YW, Bae EA, Cai XF, Lee JJ, and Kim DH. (2007). In vitro and in vivo antiallergic effect of the fructus of Evodia rutaecarpa and its constituents, Biological and Pharmaceutical Bulletin, 30(1):197–199, 2007.


Shyu KG, Lin S, Lee CC et al. (2006). Evodiamine inhibits in vitro angiogenesis: implication for anti-tumorgenicity. Life Sciences, 78(19):2234–2243.


Takada Y, Kobayashi Y, Aggarwal BB. (2005). Evodiamine Abolishes Constitutive and Inducible NF- κB Activation by Inhibiting IκBα Kinase Activation, Thereby Suppressing NF-κ B-regulated Antiapoptotic and Metastatic Gene Expression, Up-regulating Apoptosis, and Inhibiting Invasion. The Journal of Biological Chemistry, 280:17203-17212. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M500077200.


Tsai HP, Lin LW, Lai ZY et al. (2010). Immobilizing topoisomerase I on a surface plasmon resonance biosensor chip to screen for inhibitors. Journal of Biomedical Science, 17(1):49.


Wang C, Li S, Wang MW. (2010). Evodiamine-induced human melanoma A375-S2 cell death was mediated by PI3K/Akt/caspase and Fas-L/NF- κ B signaling pathways and augmented by ubiquitin-proteasome inhibition. Toxicology in Vitro, 24(3):898–904.


Wang KL, Hsia SM, Yeh JY, et al. (2013). Anti-Proliferative Effects of Evodiamine on Human Breast Cancer Cells. PLoS One, 8(6):e67297.


Wei WT, Chen H, Wang ZH, et al. (2012). Enhanced anti-tumor efficacy of gemcitabine by evodiamine on pancreatic cancer via regulating PI3K/Akt pathway. Int J Biol Sci, 8(1):1-14.


Yu H, Jin H, Gong W, Wang Z, Liang H. (2013). Pharmacological actions of multi-target-directed evodiamine. Molecules, 18(2):1826-43. doi: 10.3390/molecules18021826.


Yang J, Wu LJ, Tashino SI, et al. (2007). Critical roles of reactive oxygen species in mitochondrial permeability transition in mediating evodiamine-induced human melanoma A375-S2 cell apoptosis. Free Radical Research, 41(10):1099–1108.


Zhang Y, Wu LJ, Tashiro SI, Onodera S, Ikejima T. (2003). Intracellular regulation of evodiamine-induced A375-S2 cell death. Biological and Pharmaceutical Bulletin, 26(11):1543–1547.


Zhang Y, Zhang QH, Wu LJ, et al. (2004). Atypical apoptosis in L929 cells induced by evodiamine isolated from Evodia rutaecarpa. Journal of Asian Natural Products Research, 6(1):19–27.

Isoflavones

Cancer: Prostate, breast, endometrial

Action: Anti-estrogenic effects, radio-protective effect, pneumonitis, cachexia-inhibiting

Prostate Cancer, Breast Cancer

Isoflavones have been investigated in detail for their role in the prevention and therapy of prostate cancer. This is primarily because of the overwhelming data connecting high dietary isoflavone intake with reduced risk of developing prostate cancer. A number of investigations have evaluated the mechanism(s) of anti-cancer action of isoflavones such as genistein, daidzein, biochanin A, equol, etc., in various prostate cancer models, both in vitro and in vivo.

Nuclear receptors are considered to be a central goal for maximizing treatment opportunities in breast cancer. Among natural ligands for estrogen receptors (ER and ERβ), which are members of the nuclear receptors super-family, are found isoflavones. These natural compounds have a similar structure to the main female hormone 17β-estradiol. A rich source of isoflavones is soy and its products. Three isoflavones of the aglycone form (genistein, daidzein, glycitein) are predominantly found in soybean and red clover. Other important isoflavones are biochanin A and formononetin (Bialešová et al., 2013).

Breast Cancer

Soy isoflavones do not function as an estrogen, but rather exhibit anti-estrogenic properties. However, their metabolism differs between humans and animals and therefore the outcomes of animal studies may not be applicable to humans. The majority of breast cancer cases are hormone-receptor-positive; therefore, soy isoflavones should be considered a potential anti-cancer therapeutic agent (Douglas et al., 2013).

Anti-cancer Effects

Use of soy isoflavone mixture has been advocated as an alternative, wherein daidzein can negate harmful effects of genistein. Recent research indicates the novel role of genistein and other isoflavones in the potentiation of radiation therapy, epigenetic regulation of key tumor suppressors and oncogenes, and the modulation of miRNAs, epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, and cancer stem cells, which has renewed the interest of cancer researchers in this class of anti-cancer compounds (Ahmad et al. 2013).

Radiation-induced Pneumonitis, Radiation-induced Side-effects

Radiation-induced pneumonitis and fibrosis have restricted radiotherapy for lung cancer. In a preclinical lung tumor model, soy isoflavones showed the potential to enhance radiation damage in tumor nodules and simultaneously protect normal lung from radiation injury. Soy isoflavones given pre- and post-radiation protected the lungs against adverse effects of radiation including skin injury, hair loss, increased breathing rates, inflammation, pneumonitis and fibrosis, providing evidence for a radio-protective effect of soy (Hillman et al., 2013 a).

Radio-sensitizer

Combined soy and radiation caused a significantly stronger inhibition of tumor progression compared to each modality alone in contrast to large invasive tumor nodules seen in control mice. At the same time, soy reduced radiation injury in lung tissue by decreasing pneumonitis, fibrosis and protecting alveolar septa, bronchioles and vessels (Hillman et al., 2013 b).

Endometrial Cancer

Because of their anti-oxidant and anti-mutagenic properties, flavonoids may reduce cancer risk. Some flavonoids have anti-estrogenic effects that can inhibit the growth and proliferation of endometrial cancer cells. The intake of flavanols, flavanones, flavonols, anthocyanidins, flavones, isoflavones, and proanthocyanidins was measured and high consumption of selected proanthocyanidins may reduce endometrial cancer risk (Rossi et al., 2013).

Breast Cancer Protection

The evidence to date from observational epidemiologic studies, suggests that soy food intake, in the amount consumed in Asian populations (about 10 to 20 mg isoflavones per day), may be associated with a reduction of risk of breast cancer development as well as mortality and recurrence among women with breast cancer. The large number of clinical intervention studies on soy that have investigated intermediate biomarkers of breast cancer risk, including circulating estrogen levels, mammographic density, and breast tissue changes (cell proliferation), have not shown clear beneficial or deleterious effects (Wu et al., 2013).

Cachexia-Inhibiting

Isoflavones possess anti-proliferative effects of cachexia-inducing cells (MKN45cl85 and 85As2mLuc) cancer cell lines. Isoflavone treatment on the models induced tumor cytostasis, attenuation of cachexia, and prolonged survival whereas discontinuation of the treatment resulted in progressive tumor growth and weight loss (Yanagihara et al., 2013).

Methylation Effects

There is an inverse correlation between estrogenic marker complement (C)3 and genistein, which suggests an anti-estrogenic effect. Isoflavones induced dose-specific changes in RARβ2 and CCND2 gene methylation, which correlated with genistein levels. Research by Qin & Zhu (2009) provides novel insights into estrogenic and methylation effects of dietary isoflavones.

References

Ahmad A, Biersack B, Li Y, et al. (2013). Perspectives on the Role of Isoflavones in Prostate Cancer. AAPS J, 15(4):991-1000.


Bialešová L, Brtko J, Lenko V, Macejov‡ D. (2013). Nuclear receptors – target molecules for isoflavones in cancer chemoprevention. Gen Physiol Biophys.


Douglas CC, Johnson SA, Arjmandi BH. (2013). Soy and its isoflavones: the truth behind the science in breast cancer. Anti-cancer Agents Med Chem, 13(8):1178-87.


Hillman GG, Singh-Gupta V, Lonardo F, et al [a]. (2013). Radioprotection of Lung Tissue by Soy Isoflavones. J Thorac Oncol.


Hillman GG, Singh-Gupta V, Hoogstra DJ, et al [b]. (2013). Differential effect of soy isoflavones in enhancing high intensity radiotherapy and protecting lung tissue in a preclinical model of lung carcinoma. Radiother Oncol. doi: 10.1016/j.radonc.2013.08.015.


Rossi M, Edefonti V, Parpinel M, et al. (2013). Proanthocyanidins and other flavonoids in relation to endometrial cancer risk: a case-control study in Italy. Br J Cancer, 109(7):1914-1920. doi: 10.1038/bjc.2013.447.


Wu AH, Lee E, Vigen C. (2013). Soy isoflavones and breast cancer. Am Soc Clin Oncol Educ Book, 2013:102-6. doi: E10.1200/EdBook_AM.2013.33.102.


Yanagihara K, Takigahira M, Mihara K, et al. (2013). Inhibitory effects of isoflavones on tumor growth and cachexia in newly established cachectic mouse models carrying human stomach cancers. Nutr Cancer, 65(4):578-89. doi: 10.1080/01635581.2013.776089.

Parthenolide

Cancer:
Myeloma, ovarian adenocarcinoma, breast, acute myelogenous leukemia, epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT)

Action: Anti-cancer, anti-inflammatory, inhibits NF-κB, promotes apoptosis

Inhibits NF-κB & Promotes Apoptosis

Parthenolide, a sesquiterpene lactone derived from the leaves of feverfew (Tanacetum parthenium (L.)), is considered a main bioactive component of this herb. Feverfew has been used orally or as an infusion for the treatment of migraine, arthritis, fever, and stomachache. Besides its anti-inflammatory and anti-migraine properties, parthenolide also shows anti-cancer activities in a variety of cell lines. It contains an alpha-methylene-gamma-lactone ring and an epoxide moiety which are able to interact with nucleophilic sites of biologically important molecules.

Parthenolide modulates multiple targets, thereby contributing to its various in vitro and in vivo effects. Inhibition of NF-kappaB activity, constitutive in many types of cancers via either interaction with IKK or more directly with the p65 subunit of NF-kappaB, is considered one of the main mechanisms of its action. In addition, inhibition of STAT and MAP kinase activities and the induction of sustained JNK activity as well as p53 activity via influencing MDM2 and HDAC1 levels lead to an increased susceptibility of cancer cells to chemo- and radio- therapy. At the epigenetic level, parthenolide reduces HDAC1 level and, by inhibiting DNMT2 activity, induces global hypomethylation of DNA, which can restore the expressions of some suppressor genes.

Moreover, this compound reduces the cellular level of GSH in cancer cells, followed by ROS accumulation and apoptosis. A unique property of parthenolide is its ability to induce cell death mainly in cancer cells, while sparing healthy ones and it also protects normal cells from UVB and oxidative stress. More remarkably, it seems to have the potential to target some cancer stem cells. Its wide array of biological activity and low toxicity make parthenolide a very promising drug with multi-pharmacological potential, largely dependent on the cellular context (Koprowska et al., 2010).

Multiple Myeloma

It has been shown that parthenolide is a potent anti-MM-CSC agent. Multiple myeloma (MM) is an incurable plasma cell malignancy where nearly all patients succumb to a relapse. The current preclinical models of MM target the plasma cells, constituting the bulk of the tumor, leaving the cancer stem cells to trigger a relapse. It demonstrated preferential toxicity toward MM-CSCs over non-tumorigenic MM cells. Addition of the bone marrow stromal compartment abrogated andrographolide activity while having no effect on parthenolide cytoxicity. It hence has anti-CSC activity in myeloma, suggesting that it has the potential to improve the survival of patients with MM by eliminating the relapse-causing MM-CSCs (Gunn et al., 2011).

Acute Myelogenous Leukemia

Parthenolide (PTL), a naturally occurring small molecule, induces robust apoptosis in primary human acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) cells and blast crisis CML (bcCML) cells while sparing normal hematopoietic cells. Furthermore, analysis of progenitor cells using in vitro colony assays, as well as stem cells using the non-obese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficient (NOD/SCID) xenograft model, show that PTL also preferentially targets AML progenitor and stem cell populations.

Notably, in comparison to the standard chemotherapy drug cytosine arabinoside (Ara-C), PTL is much more specific to leukemia cells. The molecular mechanism of PTL-mediated apoptosis is strongly associated with inhibition of nuclear factor κB (NF-κB), pro-apoptotic activation of p53, and increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) (Guzman, et al., 2005).

PTL is known to be a potent inhibitor of NF-κB (Bork et al., 1997). The mechanism of NF-κB down-regulation appears to occur via inhibition of the IKK complex. Guzman et al. (2005) observed strong inhibition of NF-κB in primary AML cells and speculate that this activity contributes to the efficacy of PTL. However, previous genetic studies using a dominant-negative repressor of NF-κB activity have shown that inhibition of NF-κB alone is not sufficient to mediate the robust cell death observed with PTL. Rather, blockade of the NF-κB pathway appears to sensitize primary AML cells to death and induces a relatively slow spontaneous apoptosis (~50% cell death in 36 h) (Guzman et al., 2002). Similarly, studies by Romano et al. (2000) showed that treatment of primary AML blasts with NF-κB decoy oligonucleotides was not sufficient to induce a strong apoptotic response.

Consequently, PTL must be affecting other pathways relevant to AML-specific survival. One such pathway appears to be mediated by the activity of p53. PTL induced rapid up-regulation of p53 protein with concomitant phosphorylation on serine (Woynarowski & Konopa, 1981).

Ovarian Carcinoma

Results suggest that parthenolide may induce apoptotic cell death in ovarian carcinoma cell lines by activating the mitochondrial pathway and the caspase-8- and Bid-dependent pathways. The apoptotic effect of parthenolide appears to be mediated by the formation of reactive oxygen species and the depletion of GSH. Parthenolide might be beneficial in the treatment of epithelial ovarian adenocarcinoma and combination therapy (Kwak et al., 2013).

Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition (EMT)

Detyrosinated tubulin, a post-translational modification of α-tubulin and a hallmark of stable microtubules, has gained recent attention given its association with tumor progression, invasiveness, and chemoresistance. Also, epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) promotes tubulin detyrosination through tubulin tyrosine ligase (TTL) suppression. Given the induction of EMT associated with inflammation and cancer progression, Whipple et al. (2013) tested anti-inflammatory nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-κB) inhibitors on a panel of human breast carcinoma cells to examine their effects on detyrosinated tubulin to identify more specific tubulin-directed anti-cancer treatments.

Breast Cancer

Sesquiterpene lactones, parthenolide and costunolide, selectively decrease detyrosinated tubulin independent of their inhibition of NF-κB. Live-cell scoring of suspended cells treated with parthenolide and costunolide show reduction in the frequency of microtentacles and inhibition of reattachment. Selective targeting of detyrosinated tubulin with parthenolide and costunolide can reduce McTN frequency and inhibit tumor cell reattachment. These actions are independent of their effects on NF-κB inhibition, presenting a novel anti-cancer property and therapeutic opportunity to selectively target a stable subset of microtubules in circulating tumor cells to reduce metastatic potential with less toxicity in breast cancer patients (Whipple et al., 2013).

References

Bork PM, Schmitz ML, Kuhnt M, Escher C, Heinrich M. (1997). Sesquiterpene lactone containing Mexican Indian medicinal plants and pure sesquiterpene lactones as potent inhibitors of transcription factor NF-kappaB. FEBS Lett, 402:85-90.


Gunn EJ, Williams JT, Huynh DT, et al. (2011). The natural products parthenolide and andrographolide exhibit anti-cancer stem cell activity in multiple myeloma. Leuk Lymphoma, 52(6):1085-97.


Guzman ML, Rossi RM, Karnischky L, et al. (2005). The sesquiterpene lactone parthenolide induces apoptosis of human acute myelogenous leukemia stem and progenitor cell. Blood, 105(11): 4163–4169. doi: 10.1182/blood-2004-10-4135.


Guzman ML, Swiderski CF, Howard DS, et al. (2002). Preferential induction of apoptosis for primary human leukemic stem cells. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 99:16220-16225.


Koprowska K, Czyz M. (2010). Molecular mechanisms of parthenolide's action: Old drug with a new face. Postepy Hig Med Dosw, 64:100-14.


Kwak SW, Park ES, Lee CS. (2013). Parthenolide induces apoptosis by activating the mitochondrial and death receptor pathways and inhibits FAK-mediated cell invasion. Mol Cell Biochem.


Romano MF, Lamberti A, Bisogni R, et al. (2000). Enhancement of cytosine arabinoside-induced apoptosis in human myeloblastic leukemia cells by NF-kappa B/Rel-specific decoy oligodeoxynucleotides. Gene Ther, 7:1234-1237.


Whipple RA, Vitolo MI, Boggs AE, et al. (2013). Parthenolide and costunolide reduce microtentacles and tumor cell attachment by selectively targeting detyrosinated tubulin independent from NF- κ B inhibition. Breast Cancer Res,15(5):R83.


Woynarowski JM, Konopa J. (1981). Inhibition of DNA biosynthesis in HeLa cells by cytotoxic and anti-tumor sesquiterpene lactones. Mol Pharmacol,19:97-102.

Honokiol (See also Injectables)

Cancer:
Lung, breast, prostate, leukemia, colorectal., esophageal., ovarian, myeloma, pancreatic, stomach, uterine

Action: Anti-angiogenic, chemo-sensitizer, multi-drug resistance reversal., anti-inflammatory, anxiolytic, anti-depressant, inhibits VEGF, anti-metastatic, synergistic effects with other cancer treatments

Honokiol is a phenolic compound purified from plants of the Magnolia genus, including Magnolia officinalis (Rehder & Wilson) and Magnolia grandiflora (L.), that exhibits anti-cancer effects in experimental models with various types of cancer cells, including esophageal., ovarian, breast, and lung cancer, as well as myeloma and leukemia. It is speculated that this compound causes cancer cell death in part through targeting mitochondria (Munroe et al., 2007; Chen et al., 2009; Fried & Arbiser, 2009).

Inhibits Angiogenesis, MDR, Anti-inflammatory, Inhibits VEGF

Honokiol is one of two dominant biphenolic compounds isolated from Magnolia spp. bark, and is the most widely researched active constituent of the bark. In vivo studies suggest that honokiol's greatest value is in its multiple anti-cancer actions. In vitro research suggests honokiol has potential to enhance current anti-cancer regimens by inhibiting angiogenesis, promoting apoptosis, providing direct cytotoxic activity, down-regulating cancer cell signaling pathways, regulating genetic expression, enhancing the effects of specific chemotherapeutic agents, radio-sensitizing cancer cells to radiation therapy, and inhibiting multi-drug resistance.

Honokiol also shows potential in preventive health by reducing inflammation and oxidative stress, providing neurological protection, and regulating glucose; in mental illness by its effects against anxiety and depression; and in helping regulate stress response signaling. Its anti-microbial effects demonstrate potential for partnering with anti-viral/antibiotic therapy, and treating secondary infections.

Honokiol may occupy a distinct therapeutic niche because of its unique characteristics: the ability to cross the blood brain barrier (BBB) and blood cerebrospinal fluid barrier (BCSFB), high systemic bioavailability, and its actions on a multiplicity of signaling pathways and genomic activity. There is a need for research on honokiol to progress to human studies and on into clinical use.

The preclinical research on honokiol's broad-ranging capabilities shows its potential as a therapeutic compound for numerous solid and hematological cancers, including its effectiveness in combating multi-drug resistance (MDR) and its synergy with other anti-cancer therapies. Research thus far shows no toxicity or serious adverse effects in animal models.

Honokiol has also been shown to inhibit spread of cancer cells through the lymph system by inhibiting one of the primary pathways involved in growth stimulation related to vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) (Wen et al., 2009).

Inhibits Angiogenesis, Gastric Cancer

A 2012 in vivo study in PLoS One showed that honokiol, by inhibiting angiogenic pathways such as STAT-3, dampened peritoneal dissemination of gastric cancer in mice (5 mg/kg delivered intraperitoneally) (Liu et al., 2012).    

Induces Apoptosis; Leukemia

Honokiol induces cell apoptosis in several cell lines, such as leukemia cell lines HL-60, colon cancer cell lines RKO, lung cancer cell lines A549 and CH27 (Hirano et al., 1994; Wang et al., 2004; Hibasami et al., 1998; Konoshima et al., 1991;Yang et al., 2002; Kong et al., 2005). It also has remarkable in vivo anti-tumor activities in tumor mouse models (Bai et al., 2003). Honokiol has demonstrated potent anti-angiogenic and anti-tumor properties against aggressive angiosarcoma by blocking of VEGF-induced VEGF receptor 2 autophosphorylation (Konoshima et al., 1991; Yang et al., 2002).

MDR

Honokiol has also been found to down-regulate the expression of P-glycoprotein at mRNA and protein levels in MCF-7/ADR, a human breast MDR cancer cell line. The down-regulation of P-glycoprotein is accompanied with a partial recovery of the intracellular drug accumulation (Xu et al., 2006).

Prostate Cancer

In addition, it has been shown that prostate cancer cells that failed to respond to hormone withdrawal responded to honokiol-induced apoptosis. It was found to significantly induce death in cells surrounding primary and metastatic prostate cancers, the prostate stromal fibroblasts, marrow stromal cells, and bone marrow-associated endothelial cells. Honokiol is hence a promising nontoxic agent that could be used as an adjuvant with low-dose docetaxel for the treatment of hormone-refractory prostate cancer and its distant bone metastases (Shigemura et al., 2007).

Anti-metastatic

Honokiol inhibited the activity of MMP-9, which may be responsible, in part, for the inhibition of tumor cell invasiveness (Nagase et al., 2001).

Breast Cancer

The development of more targeted and low toxic drugs from traditional Chinese medicines for breast cancer are needed due to most of the anti-breast cancer drugs often being limited because of drug resistance and serious adverse reactions. Results have shown that honokiol inhibited the rate of breast cancer MDA-MB-231 cell growth (Nagalingam et al., 2012).

Synergistic Effects with Other Cancer Treatments

One of the most promising benefits of honokiol is its ability to synergize with other cancer treatments. Clinical trials are desperately needed to validate the potential synergy that has been demonstrated in vitro and in vivo.

Chemotherapy

• A 2013 in vitro study published in the International Journal of Oncology showed that honokiol synergized chemotherapy drugs in Multi-drug-resistant breast cancer (Tian et al., 2013). A 2011 in vitro study published in PLoS One found that honokiol enhanced the apoptotic effects of the anti-cancer drug gemcitabine against pancreatic cancer (Arora et al., 2011).

• In vivo research published in Oncology Letters in 2011 found honokiol enhanced the action of cisplatin against colon cancer (Cheng et al., 2011).

• A 2010 in vitro study from the Journal of Biological Regulators and Homeostatic Agents showed that honokiol resensitized cancer cells to doxorubicin in Multi-drug-resistant uterine cancer (Angelini et al., 2010).

• A 2010 in vitro study published in Toxicology Mechanisms and Methods showed honokiol performed synergistically with the drug imatinib against human leukemia cells (Wang et al., 2010).

• 2008 in vivo research published in the International Journal of Gynecological Cancer showed honokiol to potentiate the activity of cisplatin in murine models of ovarian cancer (Liu et al., 2008).

• 2005 in vitro research published in Blood showed honokiol enhanced the cytotoxicity induced by fludarabine, cladribine, and chlorambucil, indicating it is a potent inducer of apoptosis in B-CLL cells (Battle et al., 2005).

Radiation treatment

• 2012 in vitro research published in Molecular Cancer Therapeutics showed that honokiol was able to sensitize cancer cells to radiation treatments (Ponnurangam et al., 2012).

• A 2011 in vitro study published in American Journal of Physiology Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology showed honokiol sensitized treatment-resistant colon cancer cells to radiation therapy (He et al., 2011).

Inhibition of multi-drug resistance

Honokiol has been shown to interact with genes that are involved with mechanisms of drug efflux, thus reversing MDR in experimental models. The exact mechanisms of action in this regard are thought to be related to effects of blocking of NF-kB activity, but other mechanisms may also be involved (Xu et al., 2006).

References

Angelini A, Di Ilio C, Castellani ML, Conti P, Cuccurullo F. (2010). Modulation of Multi-drug resistance p-glycoprotein activity by flavonoids and honokiol in human doxorubicin-resistant sarcoma cells (MES-SA/DX-5): Implications for natural sedatives as chemosensitizing agents in cancer therapy. Journal of Biological Regulators & Homeostatic Agents, 24(2). 197-205.


Arora S, Bhardwaj A, Srivastava SK, et al. (2011). Honokiol arrests Cell-cycle, induces apoptosis, and potentiates the cytotoxic effect of gemcitabine in human pancreatic cancer cells. PLoS One, 6(6), e21573. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0021573.


Bai X, Cerimele F, Ushio-Fukai M, et al. (2003). Honokiol, a small molecular weight natural product, inhibits angiogenesis in vitro and tumor growth in vivo. J Biol Chem, 278: 35501–7.


Battle TE, Arbiser J, Frank DA. (2005). The natural product honokiol induces caspase-dependent apoptosis in B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL) cells. Blood, 106(2), 690-697.


Chen G, Izzo J, Demizu Y, et al. (2009). Different redox states in malignant and nonmalignant esophageal epithelial cells and differential cytotoxic responses to bile acid and honokiol. Antioxid. Redox Signal., 11(5):1083–1095


Cheng N, Xia T, Han Y, et al. (2001). Synergistic anti-tumor effects of liposomal honokiol combined with cisplatin in colon cancer models. Oncology Letters, 2(5), 957-962.


Eliaz I. (2013). Honokiol research review: A promising extract with multiple applications. Natural Medicine Journal., 5(7).


Fried LE, Arbiser JL. (2009). Honokiol, a multifunctional anti-angiogenic and anti-tumor agent. Antioxid. Redox Signal., 1(5):1139–1148. doi: 10.1089/ARS.2009.2440.


He Z, Subramaniam D, Ramalingam S, et al. (2011). Honokiol radiosensitizes colorectal cancer cells: enhanced activity in cells with mismatch repair defects. American Journal of Physiology: Gastrointest and Liver Physiology, 301(5):G929-937.


Hibasami H, Achiwa Y, Katsuzaki H, et al. (1998). Honokiol induces apoptosis in human lymphoid leukemia Molt 4B cells. Int J Mol Med, 2:671–3.


Hirano T, Gotoh M, Oka K. (1994). Natural flavonoids and lignans are potent cytostatic agents against human leukemic HL-60 cells. Life Sci, 55:1061–9.


Hou X, Yuan X, Zhang B, Wang S, Chen Q. (2013). Screening active anti-breast cancer compounds from Cortex Magnolia officinalis by 2D LC-MS. J Sep Sci, 36(4):706-12. doi: 10.1002/jssc.201200896.


Kong ZL, Tzeng SC, Liu YC. (2005). Cytotoxic neolignans: an SAR study. Bioorg Med Chem Lett, 15: 163–6.


Konoshima T, Kozuka M, Tokuda H, et al. (1991). Studies on inhibitors of skin tumor promotion. IX. Neolignans from Magnolia officinalis. J Nat Prod, 54: 816–22.


Liu Y, Chen L, He X, et al. (2010). Enhancement of therapeutic effectiveness by combining liposomal honokiol with cisplatin in ovarian carcinoma. International Journal of Gynecological Cancer, 18(4), 652-659.


Liu SH, Wang KB, Lan KH, et al. (2012). Calpain/SHP-1 interaction by honokiol dampening peritoneal dissemination of gastric cancer in nu/nu mice. PLoS One, 7(8):e43711.


Munroe ME, Arbiser JL, Bishop GA. (2007). Honokiol, a natural plant product, inhibits inflammatory signals and alleviates inflammatory arthritis. J. Immunol., 179(2):753–763


Nagalingam A, Arbiser JL, Bonner MY, Saxena NK, Sharma D. (2012). Honokiol activates AMP-activated protein kinase in breast cancer cells via an LKB1-dependent pathway and inhibits breast carcinogenesis. Breast Cancer Research, 14:R35 doi:10.1186/bcr3128


Nagase H, Ikeda K, Sakai Y. (2001). Inhibitory Effect of Magnolol and Honokiol from Magnolia obovata on Human Fibrosarcoma HT-1080 Invasiveness in vitro. Planta Med, 67(8): 705-708. DOI: 10.1055/s-2001-18345


Ponnurangam S, Mammen JM, Ramalingam S, et al. (2012). Honokiol in combination with radiation targets notch signaling to inhibit colon cancer stem cells. Molecular Cancer Therapeutics, 11(4), 963-972. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0043711.


Shigemura K, Arbiser JL, Sun SY, et al. (2007). Honokiol, a natural plant product, inhibits the bone metastatic growth of human prostate cancer cells. Cancer, 109(7), 1279-1289.


Tian W, Deng Y, Li L, et al. (2013). Honokiol synergizes chemotherapy drugs in Multi-drug-resistant breast cancer cells via enhanced apoptosis and additional programmed necrotic death. International Journal of Oncology, 42(2), 721-732. doi: 10.3892/ijo.2012.1739.


Wang Y, Yang Z, Zhao X. (2010). Honokiol induces parapoptosis and apoptosis and exhibits schedule-dependent synergy in combination with imatinib in human leukemia cells. Toxicology Mechanisms and Methods, 20(5), 234-241. doi: 10.3109/15376511003758831.


Wang T, Chen F, Chen Z, et al. (2004). Honokiol induces apoptosis through p53-independent pathway in human colorectal cell line RKO. World J Gastroenterol, 10: 2205–8.


Wen J, Fu AF, Chen LJ, et al. (2009). Liposomal honokiol inhibits VEGF-D-induced lymphangiogenesis and metastasis in xenograft tumor model. International Journal of Cancer, 124(11), 2709-2718. doi: 10.1002/ijc.24244.


Xu D, Lu Q, Hu X. (2006). Down-regulation of P-glycoprotein expression in MDR breast cancer cell MCF-7/ADR by honokiol. Cancer Letters, 243(2), 274-280.


Yang SE, Hsieh MT, Tsai TH, Hsu SL. (2002). Down-modulation of Bcl-XL, release of cytochrome c and sequential activation of caspases during honokiol-induced apoptosis in human squamous lung cancer CH27 cells. Biochemical Pharmacology, 63(9), 1641-1651.

Source

Eliaz I. (2013). Honokiol research review: A promising extract with multiple applications. Natural Medicine Journal., 5(7). Retrieved from http://www.naturalmedicinejournal.com/article_content.asp?edition=1.

Curcumin

Cancer: Colorectal., prostate, pancreatic

Action: MDR, chemo-preventive activity, anti-inflammatory, attenuation of immune suppression

Chemo-preventive Activity

Curcumin is a naturally occurring, dietary polyphenolic phytochemical that is under preclinical trial evaluation for cancer-preventive drug development. It is derived from the rhizome of Curcuma longa L. and has both anti-oxidant and anti-inflammatory properties; it inhibits chemically-induced carcinogenesis in the skin, forestomach, and colon when it is administered during initiation and/or postinitiation stages. Chemo-preventive activity of curcumin is observed when it is administered prior to, during, and after carcinogen treatment as well as when it is given only during the promotion/progression phase (starting late in premalignant stage) of colon carcinogenesis (Kawamori et al., 1999)

Anti-inflammatory

With respect to inflammation, in vitro, it inhibits the activation of free radical-activated transcription factors, such as nuclear factor κB (NFκB) and AP-1, and reduces the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor-α (TNFα), interleukin-1β (IL-1β), and interleukin-8 (Chan et al., 1998)

Prostate Cancer

In addition, NF-kappaB and AP-1 may play a role in the survival of prostate cancer cells, and curcumin may abrogate their survival mechanisms (Mukhopadhyay et al., 2001).

Pancreatic Cancer

In patients suffering from pancreatic cancer, orally-administered curcumin was found to be well-tolerated and despite limited absorption, had a reasonable impact on biological activity in some patients. This was attributed to its potent nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) and tumor-inhibitory properties, against advanced pancreatic cancer (Dhillon et al., 2008)

MDR

Curcumin, the major component in Curcuma longa (Jianghuang), inhibited the transport activity of all three major ABC transporters, i.e. Pgp, MRP1 and ABCG2 (Ganta et al., 2009).

Curcumin reversed MDR of doxorubicin or daunorubicin in K562/DOX cell line and decreased Pgp expression in a time-dependent manner (Chang et al., 2006). Curcumin enhanced the sensitivity to vincristine by the inhibition of Pgp in SGC7901/VCR cell line (Tang et al., 2005). Moreover, curcumin was useful in reversing MDR associated with a decrease in bcl-2 and survivin expression but an increase in caspase-3 expression in COC1/DDP cell line (Ying et al., 2007).

The cytotoxicity of vincristine and paclitaxel were also partially restored by curcumin in resistant KBV20C cell line. Curcumin derivatives reversed MDR by inhibiting Pgp efflux (Um et al., 2008). A chlorine substituent at the meta-or para-position on benzamide improved MDR reversal [72]. Bisdemethoxycurcumin modified from curcumin resulted in greater inhibition of Pgp expression (Limtrakul et al., 2004).

Attenuation of Immune Suppression

Curcumin (a chalcone) exhibited toxicity to human neural stem cells (hNSCs). Although oridonin (a diterpene) showed a null toxicity toward hNSCs, it repressed the enzymatic function only marginally in contrast to its potent cytotoxicity in various cancer cell lines. While the mode of action of the enzyme-polyphenol complex awaits to be investigated, the sensitivity of enzyme inhibition was compared to the anti-proliferative activities toward three cancer cell lines.

The IC50s obtained from both sets of the experiments indicate that they are in the vicinity of micromolar concentration with the enzyme inhibition slightly more active.

These results suggest that attenuation of immune suppression via inhibition of IDO-1 enzyme activity may be one of the important mechanisms of polyphenols in chemoprevention or combinatorial cancer therapy (Chen et al., 2012).

Cancer Stem Cells

In cancers that appear to follow the stem cell model, pathways such as Wnt, Notch and Hedgehog may be targeted with natural compounds such as curcumin or drugs to reduce the risk of initiation of new tumors. Disease progression of established tumors could also potentially be inhibited by targeting the tumorigenic stem cells alone, rather than aiming to reduce overall tumor size.

Cancer treatments could be evaluated by assessing stem cell markers before and after treatment. Targeted stem cell specific treatment of cancers may not result in 'complete' or 'partial' responses radiologically, as stem cell targeting may not reduce the tumor bulk, but eliminate further tumorigenic potential. These changes are discussed using breast, pancreatic, and lung cancer as examples (Reddy et al., 2011).

Multiple Cancer Effects; Cell-signaling

Curcumin has been shown to interfere with multiple cell signaling pathways, including cell-cycle (cyclin D1 and cyclin E), apoptosis (activation of caspases and down-regulation of anti-apoptotic gene products), proliferation (HER-2, EGFR, and AP-1), survival (PI3K/AKT pathway), invasion (MMP-9 and adhesion molecules), angiogenesis (VEGF), metastasis (CXCR-4) and inflammation (NF- κB, TNF, IL-6, IL-1, COX-2, and 5-LOX).

The activity of curcumin reported against leukemia and lymphoma, gastrointestinal cancers, genitourinary cancers, breast cancer, ovarian cancer, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, lung cancer, melanoma, neurological cancers, and sarcoma reflects its ability to affect multiple targets (Anand et al., 2008).

Anti-inflammatory; Cell-signaling

Curcumin, a liposoluble polyphenolic pigment isolated from the rhizomes of Curcuma longa L. (Zingiberaceae), is another potential candidate for new anti-cancer drug development. Curcumin has been reported to influence many cell-signaling pathways involved in tumor initiation and proliferation. Curcumin inhibits COX-2 activity, cyclin D1 and MMPs overexpresion, NF-kB, STAT and TNF-alpha signaling pathways and regulates the expression of p53 tumor suppressing gene.

Curcumin is well-tolerated but has a reduced systemic bioavailability. Polycurcumins (PCurc 8) and curcumin encapsulated in biodegradable polymeric nanoparticles showed higher bioavailability than curcumin together with a significant tumor growth inhibition in both in vitro and in vivo studies (Cretu et al., 2012). Curcumin also sensitizes tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL)-induced apoptosis through reactive oxygen species-mediated up-regulation of death receptor 5 (DR5) (Jung et al., 2005).

Curcumin and bioavailability

Curcumin, a major constituent of the spice turmeric, suppresses expression of the enzyme cyclooxygenase 2 (Cox-2) and has cancer chemo-preventive properties in rodents. It possesses poor systemic availability. Marczylo et al. (2007) explored whether formulation with phosphatidylcholine increases the oral bioavailability or affects the metabolite profile of curcumin. Their results suggest that curcumin formulated with phosphatidylcholine furnishes higher systemic levels of parent agent than unformulated curcumin.

Curcuminoids are poorly water-soluble compounds and to overcome some of the drawbacks of curcuminoids, Aditya et al. (2012) explored the potential of liposomes for the intravenous delivery of curcuminoids. The curcuminoids-loaded liposomes were formulated from phosphatidylcholine (soy PC). Curcumin/curcuminoids were encapsulated in phosphatidylcholine vesicles with high yields. Vesicles in the size range around 200 nm were selected for stability and cell experiments. Liposomal curcumin were found to be twofold to sixfold more potent than corresponding curcuminoids. Moreover, the mixture of curcuminoids was found to be more potent than pure curcumin in regard to the anti-oxidant and anti-inflammatory activities (Basnet et al., 2012). Results suggest that the curcumin-phosphatidylcholine complex improves the survival rate by increasing the anti-oxidant activity (Inokuma et al., 2012). Recent clinical trials on the effectiveness of phosphatidylcholine formulated curcumin in treating eye diseases have also shown promising results, making curcumin a potent therapeutic drug candidate for inflammatory and degenerative retinal and eye diseases (Wang et al., 2012). Data demonstrate that treatment with curcumin dissolved in sesame oil or phosphatidylcholine curcumin improves the peripheral neuropathy of R98C mice by alleviating endoplasmic reticulum stress, by reducing the activation of unfolded protein response (Patzk- et al., 2012).

References

Aditya NP, Chimote G, Gunalan K, et al. (2012). Curcuminoids-loaded liposomes in combination with arteether protects against Plasmodium berghei infection in mice. Exp Parasitol, 131(3):292-9. doi: 10.1016/j.exppara.2012.04.010.


Anand P, Sundaram C, Jhurani S, Kunnumakkara AB, Aggarwal BB. (2008). Curcumin and cancer: An 'old-age' disease with an 'age-old' solution. Cancer Letters, 267(1):133–164. doi: 10.1016/j.canlet.2008.03.025.


Basnet P, Hussain H, Tho I, Skalko-Basnet N. (2012). Liposomal delivery system enhances anti-inflammatory properties of curcumin. J Pharm Sci, 101(2):598-609. doi: 10.1002/jps.22785.


Chan MY, Huang HI, Fenton MR, Fong D. (1998). In Vivo Inhibition of Nitric Oxide Synthase Gene Expression by Curcumin, a Cancer-preventive Natural Product with Anti-Inflammatory Properties. Biochemical Pharmacology, 55(12), 1955-1962.


Chang HY, Pan KL, Ma FC, et al. (2006). The study on reversing mechanism of Multi-drug resistance of K562/DOX cell line by curcumin and erythromycin. Chin J Hem, 27(4):254-258.


Chen SS, Corteling R, Stevanato L, Sinden J. (2012). Polyphenols Inhibit Indoleamine 3,5-Dioxygenase-1 Enzymatic Activity — A Role of Immunomodulation in Chemoprevention. Discovery Medicine.


Cre ţ u E, Trifan A, Vasincu A, Miron A. (2012). Plant-derived anti-cancer agents – curcumin in cancer prevention and treatment. Rev Med Chir Soc Med Nat Iasi, 116(4):1223-9.


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Ginsenoside (See also Rg3)

Cancer:
Breast, colorectal., brain, leukemia, acute myeloid leukemia (AML), melanoma, lung, glioblastoma, prostate, fibroblast carcinoma

Action: Multi-drug resistance, apoptosis, anti-cancer, chemotherapy sensitizer, CYP450 regulating, inhibits growth and metastasis, down-regulates MMP-9, enhances 5-FU, anti-inflammatory

Inhibits Growth and Metastasis

Ginsenosides, belonging to a group of saponins with triterpenoid dammarane skeleton, show a variety of pharmacological effects. Among them, some ginsenoside derivatives, which can be produced by acidic and alkaline hydrolysis, biotransformation and steamed process from the major ginsenosides in ginseng plant, perform stronger activities than the major primeval ginsenosides on inhibiting growth or metastasis of tumor, inducing apoptosis and differentiation of tumor and reversing multi-drug resistance of tumor. Therefore ginsenoside derivatives are promising as anti-tumor active compounds and drugs (Cao et al., 2012).

Ginsenoside content can vary widely depending on species, location of growth, and growing time before harvest. The root, the organ most often used, contains saponin complexes. These are often split into two groups: the Rb1 group (characterized by the protopanaxadiol presence: Rb1, Rb2, Rc and Rd) and the Rg1 group (protopanaxatriol: Rg1, Re, Rf, and Rg2). The potential health effects of ginsenosides include anti-carcinogenic, immunomodulatory, anti-inflammatory, anti-allergic, anti-atherosclerotic, anti-hypertensive, and anti-diabetic effects as well as anti-stress activity and effects on the central nervous system (Christensen, 2009).

Ginsenosides are considered the major pharmacologically active constituents, and approximately 12 types of ginsenosides have been isolated and structurally identified. Ginsenoside Rg3 was metabolized to ginsenoside Rh2 and protopanaxadiol by human fecal microflora (Bae et al., 2002). Ginsenoside Rg3 and the resulting metabolites exhibited potent cytotoxicity against tumor cell lines (Bae et al., 2002).

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Ginseng Extracts (GE); Methanol-(alc-GE) or Water-extracted (w-GE) and ER+ Breast Cancer

Ginseng root extracts and the biologically active ginsenosides have been shown to inhibit proliferation of human cancer cell lines, including breast cancer. However, there are conflicting data that suggest that ginseng extracts (GEs) may or may not have estrogenic action, which might be contraindicated in individuals with estrogen-dependent cancers. The current study was designed to address the hypothesis that the extraction method of American ginseng (Panax quinquefolium) root will dictate its ability to produce an estrogenic response using the estrogen receptor (ER)-positive MCF-7 human breast cancer cell model. MCF-7 cells were treated with a wide concentration range of either methanol-(alc-GE) or water-extracted (w-GE) ginseng root for 6 days.

An increase in MCF-7 cell proliferation by GE indicated potential estrogenicity. This was confirmed by blocking GE-induced MCF-7 cell proliferation with ER antagonists ICI 182,780 (1 nM) and 4-hydroxytamoxifen (0.1 microM). Furthermore, the ability of GE to bind ERalpha or ERbeta and stimulate estrogen-responsive genes was examined. Alc-GE, but not w-GE, was able to increase MCF-7 cell proliferation at low concentrations (5-100 microg/mL) when cells were maintained under low-estrogen conditions. The stimulatory effect of alc-GE on MCF-7 cell proliferation was blocked by the ER antagonists ICI 182,780 or 4-hydroxyta-moxifen. At higher concentrations of GE, both extracts inhibited MCF-7 and ER-negative MDA-MB-231 cell proliferation regardless of media conditions.

These data indicate that low concentrations of alc-GE, but not w-GE, elicit estrogenic effects, as evidenced by increased MCF-7 cell proliferation, in a manner antagonized by ER antagonists, interactions of alc-GE with estrogen receptors, and increased expression of estrogen-responsive genes by alc-GE. Thus, discrepant results between different laboratories may be due to the type of GE being analyzed for estrogenic activity (King et al., 2006).

Anti-cancer

Previous studies suggested that American ginseng and notoginseng possess anti-cancer activities. Using a special heat-preparation or steaming process, the content of Rg3, a previously identified anti-cancer ginsenoside, increased significantly and became the main constituent in the steamed American ginseng. As expected, using the steamed extract, anti-cancer activity increased significantly. Notoginseng has a very distinct saponin profile compared to that of American ginseng. Steaming treatment of notoginseng also significantly increased anti-cancer effect (Wang et al., 2008).

Steam Extraction; Colorectal Cancer

After steaming treatment of American ginseng berries (100-120 ¡C for 1 h, and 120 ¡C for 0.5-4 h), the content of seven ginsenosides, Rg1, Re, Rb1, Rc, Rb2, Rb3, and Rd, decreased; the content of five ginsenosides, Rh1, Rg2, 20R-Rg2, Rg3, and Rh2, increased. Rg3, a previously identified anti-cancer ginsenoside, increased significantly. Two h of steaming at 120 ¡C increased the content of ginsenoside Rg3 to a greater degree than other tested ginsenosides. When human colorectal cancer cells were treated with 0.5 mg/mL steamed berry extract (120 ¡C 2 hours), the anti-proliferation effects were 97.8% for HCT-116 and 99.6% for SW-480 cells.

After staining with Hoechst 33258, apoptotic cells increased significantly by treatment with steamed berry extract compared with unheated extracts. The steaming of American ginseng berries hence augments ginsenoside Rg3 content and increases the anti-proliferative effects on two human colorectal cancer cell lines (Wang et al., 2006).

Glioblastoma

The major active components in red ginseng consist of a variety of ginsenosides including Rg3, Rg5 and Rk1, each of which has different pharmacological activities. Among these, Rg3 has been reported to exert anti-cancer activities through inhibition of angiogenesis and cell proliferation.

It is essential to develop a greater understanding of this novel compound by investigating the effects of Rg3 on a human glioblastoma cell line and its molecular signaling mechanism. The mechanisms of apoptosis by ginsenoside Rg3 were related with the MEK signaling pathway and reactive oxygen species. These data suggest that ginsenoside Rg3 is a novel agent for the chemotherapy of GBM (Choi et al., 2013).

Colon Cancer; Chemotherapy

Rg3 can inhibit the activity of NF-kappaB, a key transcriptional factor constitutively activated in colon cancer that confers cancer cell resistance to chemotherapeutic agents. Compared to treatment with Rg3 or chemotherapy alone, combined treatment was more effective (i.e., there were synergistic effects) in the inhibition of cancer cell growth and induction of apoptosis and these effects were accompanied by significant inhibition of NF-kappaB activity.

NF-kappaB target gene expression of apoptotic cell death proteins (Bax, caspase-3, caspase-9) was significantly enhanced, but the expression of anti-apoptotic genes and cell proliferation marker genes (Bcl-2, inhibitor of apoptosis protein (IAP-1) and X chromosome IAP (XIAP), Cox-2, c-Fos, c-Jun and cyclin D1) was significantly inhibited by the combined treatment compared to Rg3 or docetaxel alone.

These results indicate that ginsenoside Rg3 inhibits NF-kappaB, and enhances the susceptibility of colon cancer cells to docetaxel and other chemotherapeutics. Thus, ginsenoside Rg3 could be useful as an anti-cancer or adjuvant anti-cancer agent (Kim et al., 2009).

Prostate Cancer; Chemo-sensitizer

Nuclear factor-kappa (NF-kappaB) is also constitutively activated in prostate cancer, and gives cancer cells resistance to chemotherapeutic agents. Rg3 has hence also been found to increase susceptibility of prostate (LNCaP and PC-3, DU145) cells against chemotherapeutics; prostate cancer cell growth as well as activation of NF-kappaB was examined. It has been found that a combination treatment of Rg3 (50 microM) with a conventional agent docetaxel (5 nM) was more effective in the inhibition of prostate cancer cell growth and induction of apoptosis as well as G(0)/G(1) arrest accompanied with the significant inhibition of NF-kappaB activity, than those by treatment of Rg3 or docetaxel alone.

The combination of Rg3 (50 microM) with cisplatin (10 microM) and doxorubicin (2 microM) was also more effective in the inhibition of prostate cancer cell growth and NF-kappaB activity than those by the treatment of Rg3 or chemotherapeutics alone. These results indicate that ginsenoside Rg3 inhibits NF-kappaB, and enhances the susceptibility of prostate cancer cells to docetaxel and other chemotherapeutics. Thus, ginsenoside Rg3 could be useful as an anti-cancer agent (Kim et al., 2010).

Colon Cancer

Ginsenosides may not only be useful in themselves, but also for their downstream metabolites. Compound K (20-O-( β -D-glucopyranosyl)-20(S)-protopanaxadiol) is an active metabolite of ginsenosides and induces apoptosis in various types of cancer cells. This study investigated the role of autophagy in compound K-induced cell death of human HCT-116 colon cancer cells. Compound K activated an autophagy pathway characterized by the accumulation of vesicles, the increased positive acridine orange-stained cells, the accumulation of LC3-II, and the elevation of autophagic flux.

Compound K-provoked autophagy was also linked to the generation of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS); both of these processes were mitigated by the pre-treatment of cells with the anti-oxidant N-acetylcysteine.   Moreover, compound K activated the c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK) signaling pathway, whereas down-regulation of JNK by its specific inhibitor SP600125 or by small interfering RNA against JNK attenuated autophagy-mediated cell death in response to compound K.

Notably, compound K-stimulated autophagy as well as apoptosis was induced by disrupting the interaction between Atg6 and Bcl-2. Taken together, these results indicate that the induction of autophagy and apoptosis by compound K is mediated through ROS generation and JNK activation in human colon cancer cells (Kim et al., 2013b).

Lung Cancer; SCC

Korea white ginseng (KWG) has been investigated for its chemo-preventive activity in a mouse lung SCC model. N-nitroso-trischloroethylurea (NTCU) was used to induce lung tumors in female Swiss mice, and KWG was given orally. KWG significantly reduced the percentage of lung SCCs from 26.5% in the control group to 9.1% in the KWG group and in the meantime, increased the percentage of normal bronchial and hyperplasia. KWG was also found to greatly reduce squamous cell lung tumor area from an average of 9.4% in control group to 1.5% in the KWG group.

High-performance liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry identified 10 ginsenosides from KWG extracts, Rb1 and Rd being the most abundant as detected in mouse blood and lung tissue. These results suggest that KWG could be a potential chemo-preventive agent for lung SCC (Pan et al., 2013).

Leukemia

Rg1 was found to significantly inhibit the proliferation of K562 cells in vitro and arrest the cells in G2/M phase. The percentage of positive cells stained by SA-beta-Gal was dramatically increased (P < 0.05) and the expression of cell senescence-related genes was up-regulated. The observation of ultrastructure showed cell volume increase, heterochromatin condensation and fragmentation, mitochondrial volume increase, and lysosomes increase in size and number. Rg1 can hence induce the senescence of leukemia cell line K562 and play an important role in regulating p53-p21-Rb, p16-Rb cell signaling pathway (Cai et al., 2012).

Leukemia, Lymphoma

It has been found that Rh2 inhibits the proliferation of human leukemia cells concentration- and time-dependently with an IC(50) of ~38 µM. Rh2 blocked cell-cycle progression at the G(1) phase in HL-60 leukemia and U937 lymphoma cells, and this was found to be accompanied by the down-regulations of cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) 4, CDK6, cyclin D1, cyclin D2, cyclin D3 and cyclin E at the protein level. Treatment of HL-60 cells with Rh2 significantly increased transforming growth factor- β (TGF- β ) production, and co-treatment with TGF- β neutralizing antibody prevented the Rh2-induced down-regulations of CDK4 and CDK6, up-regulations of p21(CIP1/WAF1) and p27(KIP1) levels and the induction of differentiation. These results demonstrate that the Rh2-mediated G(1) arrest and the differentiation are closely linked to the regulation of TGF- β production in human leukemia cells (Chung et al., 2012).

NSCLC

Ginsenoside Rh2, one of the components in ginseng saponin, has been shown to have anti-proliferative effect on human NSCLC cells and is being studied as a therapeutic drug for NSCLC. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small, non-coding RNA molecules that play a key role in cancer progression and prevention.

A unique set of changes in the miRNA expression profile in response to Rh2 treatment in the human NSCLC cell line A549 has been identified using miRNA microarray analysis. These miRNAs are predicted to have several target genes related to angiogenesis, apoptosis, chromatic modification, cell proliferation and differentiation. Thus, these results may assist in the better understanding of the anti-cancer mechanism of Rh2 in NSCLC (An et al., 2012).

Ginsenoside Concentrations

Ginsenosides, the major chemical composition of Chinese white ginseng (Panax ginseng C. A. Meyer), can inhibit tumor, enhance body immune function, prevent neurodegeneration. The amount of ginsenosides in the equivalent extraction of the nanoscale Chinese white ginseng particles (NWGP) was 2.5 times more than that of microscale Chinese white ginseng particles (WGP), and the extractions from NWGP (1000 microg/ml) reached a high tumor inhibition of 64% exposed to human lung carcinoma cells (A549) and 74% exposed to human cervical cancer cells (Hela) after 72 hours. Thia work shows that the nanoscale Chinese WGP greatly improves the bioavailability of ginsenosides (Ji et al., 2012).

Chemotherapy Side-effects

Pre-treatment with American ginseng berry extract (AGBE), a herb with potent anti-oxidant capacity, and one of its active anti-oxidant constituents, ginsenoside Re, was examined for its ability to counter cisplatin-induced emesis using a rat pica model. In rats, exposure to emetic stimuli such as cisplatin causes significant kaolin (clay) intake, a phenomenon called pica. We therefore measured cisplatin-induced kaolin intake as an indicator of the emetic response.

Rats were pre-treated with vehicle, AGBE (dose range 50–150 mg/kg, IP) or ginsenoside Re (2 and 5 mg/kg, IP). Rats were treated with cisplatin (3 mg/kg, IP) 30 min later. Kaolin intake, food intake, and body weight were measured every 24 hours, for 120 hours.

A significant dose-response relationship was observed between increasing doses of pre-treatment with AGBE and reduction in cisplatin-induced pica. Kaolin intake was maximally attenuated by AGBE at a dose of 100 mg/kg. Food intake also improved significantly at this dose (P<0.05). pre-treatment ginsenoside (5 mg/kg) also decreased kaolin intake >P<0.05). In vitro studies demonstrated a concentration-response relationship between AGBE and its ability to scavenge superoxide and hydroxyl.

Pre-treatment with AGBE and its major constituent, Re, hence attenuated cisplatin-induced pica, and demonstrated potential for the treatment of chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting. Significant recovery of food intake further strengthens the conclusion that AGBE may exert an anti-nausea/anti-emetic effect (Mehendale et al., 2005).

MDR

Because ginsenosides are structurally similar to cholesterol, the effect of Rp1, a novel ginsenoside derivative, on drug resistance using drug-sensitive OVCAR-8 and drug-resistant NCI/ADR-RES and DXR cells. Rp1 treatment resulted in an accumulation of doxorubicin or rhodamine 123 by decreasing MDR-1 activity in doxorubicin-resistant cells. Rp1 synergistically induced cell death with actinomycin D in DXR cells. Rp1 appeared to redistribute lipid rafts and MDR-1 protein.

Rp1 reversed resistance to actinomycin D by decreasing MDR-1 protein levels and Src phosphorylation with modulation of lipid rafts. Addition of cholesterol attenuated Rp1-induced raft aggregation and MDR-1 redistribution. Rp1 and actinomycin D reduced Src activity, and overexpression of active Src decreased the synergistic effect of Rp1 with actinomycin D. Rp1-induced drug sensitization was also observed with several anti-cancer drugs, including doxorubicin. These data suggest that lipid raft-modulating agents can be used to inhibit MDR-1 activity and thus overcome drug resistance (Yun et al., 2013).

Hypersensitized MDR Breast Cancer Cells to Paclitaxel

The effects of Rh2 on various tumor-cell lines for its effects on cell proliferation, induction of apoptosis, and potential interaction with conventional chemotherapy agents were investigated. Jia et al., (2004) showed that Rh2 inhibited cell growth by G1 arrest at low concentrations and induced apoptosis at high concentrations in a variety of tumor-cell lines, possibly through activation of caspases. The apoptosis induced by Rh2 was mediated through glucocorticoid receptors. Most interestingly, Rh2 can act either additively or synergistically with chemotherapy drugs on cancer cells. Particularly, it hypersensitized multi-drug-resistant breast cancer cells to paclitaxel.

These results suggest that Rh2 possesses strong tumor-inhibiting properties, and potentially can be used in treatments for multi-drug-resistant cancers, especially when it is used in combination with conventional chemotherapy agents.

MDR; Leukemia, Fibroblast Carcinoma

It was previously reported that a red ginseng saponin, 20(S)-ginsenoside Rg3 could modulate MDR in vitro and extend the survival of mice implanted with ADR-resistant murine leukemia P388 cells. A cytotoxicity study revealed that 120 microM of Rg3 was cytotoxic against a multi-drug-resistant human fibroblast carcinoma cell line, KB V20C, but not against normal WI 38 cells in vitro. 20 microM Rg3 induced a significant increase in fluorescence anisotropy in KB V20C cells but not in the parental KB cells. These results clearly show that Rg3 decreases the membrane fluidity thereby blocking drug efflux (Kwon et al., 2008).

MDR

Ginsenoside Rb1 is a representative component of panaxadiol saponins, which belongs to dammarane-type tritepenoid saponins and mainly exists in family araliaceae. It has been reported that ginsenoside Rb1 has diverse biological activities. The research development in recent decades on its pharmacological effects of cardiovascular system, anti-senility, reversing multi-drug resistance of tumor cells, adjuvant anti-cancer chemotherapy, and promoting peripheral nerve regeneration have been established (Jia et al., 2008).

Enhances Cyclophosphamide

Cyclophosphamide, an alkylating agent, has been shown to possess various genotoxic and carcinogenic effects, however, it is still used extensively as an anti-tumor agent and immunosuppressant in the clinic. Previous reports reveal that cyclophosphamide is involved in some secondary neoplasms.

C57BL/6 mice bearing B16 melanoma and Lewis lung carcinoma cells were respectively used to estimate the anti-tumor activity in vivo. The results indicated that oral administration of Rh(2) (5, 10 and 20 mg/kg body weight) alone has no obvious anti-tumor activity and genotoxic effect in mice, while Rh(2) synergistically enhanced the anti-tumor activity of cyclophosphamide (40 mg/kg body weight) in a dose-dependent manner.

Rh(2) decreased the micronucleus formation in polychromatic erythrocytes and DNA strand breaks in white blood cells in a dose-dependent way. These results suggest that ginsenoside Rh(2) is able to enhance the anti-tumor activity and decrease the genotoxic effect of cyclophosphamide (Wang, Zheng, Liu, Li, & Zheng, 2006).

Down-regulates MMP-9, Anti-metastatic

The effects of the purified ginseng components, panaxadiol (PD) and panaxatriol (PT), were examined on the expression of matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) in highly metastatic HT1080 human fibrosarcoma cell line. A significant down-regulation of MMP-9 by PD and PT was detected by Northern blot analysis; however, the expression of MMP-2 was not changed by treatment with PD and PT. The results of the in vitro invasion assay revealed that PD and PT reduced tumor cell invasion through a reconstituted basement membrane in the transwell chamber. Because of the similarity of chemical structure between PD, PT and dexamethasone (Dexa), a synthetic glucocorticoid, we investigated whether the down-regulation of MMP-9 by PD and PT were mediated by the nuclear translocation of glucocorticoid receptor (GR). Increased GR in the nucleus of HT1080 human fibrosarcoma cells treated by PD and PT was detected by immunocytochemistry.

Western blot and gel retardation assays confirmed the increase of GR in the nucleus after treatment with PD and PT. These results suggest that GR-induced down-regulation of MMP-9 by PD and PT contributes to reduce the invasive capacity of HT1080 cells (Park et al., 1999).

Enhances 5-FU; Colorectal Cancer

Panaxadiol (PD) is the purified sapogenin of ginseng saponins, which exhibit anti-tumor activity. The possible synergistic anti-cancer effects of PD and 5-FU on a human colorectal cancer cell line, HCT-116, have been investigated.

The significant suppression on HCT-116 cell proliferation was observed after treatment with PD (25 microM) for 24 and 48 hours. Panaxadiol (25 microM) markedly (P < 0.05) enhanced the anti-proliferative effects of 5-FU (5, 10, 20 microM) on HCT-116 cells compared to single treatment of 5-FU for 24 and 48 hours.

Flow cytometric analysis on DNA indicated that PD and 5-FU selectively arrested cell-cycle progression in the G1 phase and S phase (P < 0.01), respectively, compared to the control condition. Combination use of 5-FU with PD significantly (P < 0.001) increased cell-cycle arrest in the S phase compared to that treated by 5-FU alone.

The combination of 5-FU and PD significantly enhanced the percentage of apoptotic cells when compared with the corresponding cell groups treated by 5-FU alone (P < 0.001). Panaxadiol hence enhanced the anti-cancer effects of 5-FU on human colorectal cancer cells through the regulation of cell-cycle transition and the induction of apoptotic cells (Li et al., 2009).

Colorectal Cancer

The possible synergistic anti-cancer effects of Panaxadiol (PD) and Epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG), on human colorectal cancer cells and the potential role of apoptosis in the synergistic activities, have been investigated.

Cell growth was suppressed after treatment with PD (10 and 20   µm) for 48   h. When PD (10 and 20   µm) was combined with EGCG (10, 20, and 30   µm), significantly enhanced anti-proliferative effects were observed in both cell lines. Combining 20   µm of PD with 20 and 30   µm of EGCG significantly decreased S-phase fractions of cells. In the apoptotic assay, the combination of PD and EGCG significantly increased the percentage of apoptotic cells compared with PD alone (p   <   0.01).

Data from this study suggested that apoptosis might play an important role in the EGCG-enhanced anti-proliferative effects of PD on human colorectal cancer cells (Du et al., 2013).

Colorectal Cancer; Irinotecan

Cell cycle analysis demonstrated that combining irinotecan treatment with panaxadiol significantly increased the G1-phase fractions of cells, compared with irinotecan treatment alone. In apoptotic assays, the combination of panaxadiol and irinotecan significantly increased the percentage of apoptotic cells compared with irinotecan alone (P<0.01). Increased activity of caspase-3 and caspase-9 was observed after treating with panaxadiol and irinotecan.

Data from this study suggested that caspase-3- and caspase-9-mediated apoptosis may play an important role in the panaxadiol enhanced anti-proliferative effects of irinotecan on human colorectal cancer cells (Du et al., 2012).

Anti-inflammatory

Ginsenoside Re inhibited IKK- β phosphorylation and NF- κ B activation, as well as the expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines, TNF- α and IL-1 β , in LPS-stimulated peritoneal macrophages, but it did not inhibit them in TNF- α – or PG-stimulated peritoneal macrophages. Ginsenoside Re also inhibited IRAK-1 phosphorylation induced by LPS, as well as IRAK-1 and IRAK-4 degradations in LPS-stimulated peritoneal macrophages.

Orally administered ginsenoside Re significantly inhibited the expression of IL-1 β and TNF- α on LPS-induced systemic inflammation and TNBS-induced colitis in mice. Ginsenoside Re inhibited colon shortening and myeloperoxidase activity in TNBS-treated mice. Ginsenoside Re reversed the reduced expression of tight-junction-associated proteins ZO-1, claudin-1, and occludin. Ginsenoside Re (20 mg/kg) inhibited the activation of NF- κ B in TNBS-treated mice. On the basis of these findings, ginsenoside Re may ameliorate inflammation by inhibiting the binding of LPS to TLR4 on macrophages (Lee et al., 2012).

Induces Apoptosis

Compound K activated an autophagy pathway characterized by the accumulation of vesicles, the increased positive acridine orange-stained cells, the accumulation of LC3-II, and the elevation of autophagic flux. Compound K activated the c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK) signaling pathway, whereas down-regulation of JNK by its specific inhibitor SP600125 or by small interfering RNA against JNK attenuated autophagy-mediated cell death in response to compound K. Compound K also provoked apoptosis, as evidenced by an increased number of apoptotic bodies and sub-G1 hypodiploid cells, enhanced activation of caspase-3 and caspase-9, and modulation of Bcl-2 and Bcl-2-associated X protein expression (Kim et al., 2013b).

Lung Cancer

AD-1, a ginsenoside derivative, concentration-dependently reduces lung cancer cell viability without affecting normal human lung epithelial cell viability. In A549 and H292 lung cancer cells, AD-1 induces G0/G1 cell-cycle arrest, apoptosis and ROS production. The apoptosis can be attenuated by a ROS scavenger – N-acetylcysteine (NAC). In addition, AD-1 up-regulates the expression of p38 and ERK phosphorylation. Addition of a p38 inhibitor, SB203580, suppresses the AD-1-induced decrease in cell viability. Furthermore, genetic silencing of p38 attenuates the expression of p38 and decreases the AD-1-induced apoptosis.

These data support development of AD-1 as a potential agent for lung cancer therapy (Zhang et al., 2013).

Pediatric AML

In this study, Chen et al. (2013) demonstrated that compound K, a major ginsenoside metabolite, inhibited the growth of the clinically relevant pediatric AML cell lines in a time- and dose-dependent manner. This growth-inhibitory effect was attributable to suppression of DNA synthesis during cell proliferation and the induction of apoptosis was accompanied by DNA double strand breaks. Findings suggest that as a low toxic natural reagent, compound K could be a potential drug for pediatric AML intervention and to improve the outcome of pediatric AML treatment.

Melanoma

Jeong et al. (2013) isolated 12 ginsenoside compounds from leaves of Panax ginseng and tested them in B16 melanoma cells. It significantly reduced melanin content and tyrosinase activity under alpha-melanocyte stimulating hormone- and forskolin-stimulated conditions. It significantly reduced the cyclic AMP (cAMP) level in B16 melanoma cells, and this might be responsible for the regulation down of MITF and tyrosinase. Phosphorylation of a downstream molecule, a cAMP response-element binding protein, was significantly decreased according to Western blotting and immunofluorescence assay. These data suggest that A-Rh4 has an anti-melanogenic effect via the protein kinase A pathway.

Leukemia

Rg1 can significantly inhibit the proliferation of leukemia cell line K562 in vitro and arrest the cells in G2/M phase. The percentage of positive cells stained by SA-beta-Gal was dramatically increased (P < 0.05) and the expression of cell senescence-related genes was up-regulated. The observation of ultrastructure showed cell volume increase, heterochromatin condensation and fragmentation, mitochondrial volume increase, and lysosomes increase in size and number (Cai et al., 2012).

Ginsenosides and CYP 450 Enzymes

In vitro experiments have shown that both crude ginseng extract and total saponins at high concentrations (.2000 mg/ml) inhibited CYP2E1 activity in mouse and human microsomes (Nguyen et al., 2000). Henderson et al. (1999) reported the effects of seven ginsenosides and two eleutherosides (active components of the ginseng root) on the catalytic activity of a panel of cDNA-expressed CYP isoforms (CYP1A2, CYP2C9, CYP2C19, CYP2D6, and CYP3A4) using 96-well plate fluorometrical assay.

Of the constituents tested, Ginsenoside Rd caused weak inhibitory activity against CYP3A4, CYP2D6, CYP2C19,and CYP2C9, but ginsenoside Re and ginsenoside Rf (200 mM) produced a 70% and 54%increase in the activity of CYP2C9 and CYP3A4, respectively. The authors suggested that the activating effects of ginsenosides on CYP2C9 and CYP3A4 might be due to a matrix effect caused by the test compound fluorescing at the same wavelength as the metabolite of the marker substrates. Chang et al. (2002) reported the effects of two types of ginseng extract and ginsenosides (Rb1, Rb2, Rc, Rd, Re, Rf, and Rg1) on CYP1 catalytic activities.

The ginseng extracts inhibited human recombinant CYP1A1, CYP1A2, and CYP1B1 activities in a concentration-dependent manner. Rb1, Rb2, Rc, Rd, Re, Rf, and Rg1 at low concentrations had no effect on CYP1 activities, but Rb1, Rb2, Rc, Rd, and Rf at a higher ginsenoside concentration (50 mg/ml) inhibited these activities. These results indicated that various ginseng extracts and ginsenosides inhibited CYP1 activity in an enzyme-selective and extract-specific manner (Zhou et al., 2003).

References

An IS, An S, Kwon KJ, Kim YJ, Bae S. (2012). Ginsenoside Rh2 mediates changes in the microRNA expression profile of human non-small-cell lung cancer A549 cells. Oncol Rep, 29(2):523-8. doi: 10.3892/or.2012.2136.



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VEGF

The tumour microenvironment is closely correlated with the malignant degrees, metastasis, and recurrence of tumours. Besides, the acid environment, oxygen deficiency, and other inducible factors may severely affect the efficacies of routine therapies, radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Recent studies have also proved that many Chinese herbs could fight against tumour vascular angiogenesis, lower serum VEGF concentration, and inhibit expressions of VEGF. This may lead to the development of new potential antiangiogenic drugs.

Angiogenesis

Angiogenesis, the sprouting of new capillaries, is required for the development of the vascular system and, consequently, the growth of vertebrates. Angiogenic proteins, including several from the fibroblast growth factor family were found to be mitogenic not only for vascular endothelial cells but also for a wide variety of other types of cells and appeared to promote angiogenesis as part of coordinated tissue growth and repair. In the late 1980s the first selective angiogenic growth factor was purified on the basis of its ability to induce transient vascular leakage and endothelial cell mitogenesis called vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)/vascular permeability factor (VPF) (Neufeld et al 1994). The identification of VEGF (Ferrara 1993) set the stage for a rapid expansion in the understanding of what now appears to be one of the most important mediators of physiologic and pathologic angiogenesis yet discovered.

Transcription of VEGF mRNA is induced by a variety of factors. Serum-derived and paracrine growth factors and cytokines, including Platelet-Derived Growth Factor BB (PDGF-BB), basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) (Sipos et al 2002), epidermal growth factor, tumor necrosis factor α (Frank et al 1995), nitric oxide (Frank et al 1999), transforming growth factor-β1, and interleukin-1β (Li et al 1995; Jung et al 2001), can each induce expression of VEGF from 3- to 20-fold in a variety of cultured cells.

Hypoxia

Without an independent blood supply, tumours must rely on diffusion to obtain oxygen and other nutrients, and typically cannot grow more than 2-3 mm in size. Thus, a growing tumour without sufficient vasculature will have hypoxic areas.

In response to hypoxic conditions, tumours secrete vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in order to recruit new vasculature, which then provides a supply of oxygen (Gimbrone et al., 1972). Hypoxia is known to induce angiogenesis, thereby providing a compensatory mechanism by which tissues can increase oxygenation. Therefore, diminished O2 is one of the most intriguing transcriptional inducers of VEGF (Shweiki et al 1992) and its receptors (Tuder, Flook & Voelkel 1995) in normal and transformed cells. Hypoxic induction of VEGF appears to be a general response since many types of cultured cells have been observed to increase VEGF mRNA levels by approximately 10-50-fold as a consequence of lowering the percentage of O2 from ambient 21% to the range of 0-3% (Sipos et al 2002).

Vascular permeability factor (VPF)

The microvasculature of tumours is hyperpermeable compared with that of most normal tissues and as a consequence, fluid and plasma accumulate in the interstitium of solid tumors (Heldin et al 2004) and this barrier is an obstacle in tumour treatment, as it results in inefficient uptake of therapeutic agents. Vascular permeability factor (VPF), also known as vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), is a multifunctional cytokine expressed and secreted at high levels by many tumor cells of animal and human origin. VPF/VEGF is likely to have a number of important roles in tumor biology related, but not limited to, the process of tumor angiogenesis. As a potent permeability factor, VPF/VEGF promotes extravasation of plasma fibrinogen, leading to fibrin deposition, which alters the tumor extracellular matrix. This matrix promotes the ingrowth of macrophages, fibroblasts, and endothelial cells. Moreover, VPF/VEGF is a selective endothelial cell (EC) growth factor in vitro, and it presumably stimulates EC proliferation in vivo. Furthermore, VPF/VEGF has been found in animal and human tumor effusions by immunoassay and by functional assays and very likely accounts for the induction of malignant ascites. In addition to its role in tumors, VPF/VEGF has recently been found to have a role in wound healing and its expression by activated macrophages suggests that it probably also participates in certain types of chronic inflammation (Senger et al 1993; Baban & Seymour 1998). Although VEGF is known to be a powerful growth factor for therapeutic angiogenesis/vascularization in the ischemic hind limb and myocardium, it has other activities that can increase the proliferation and permeability of capillary endothelial cells. These activities may produce unwanted side effects, such as tumor angiogenesis, vascular leakage, oedema, and inflammation (Chae et al, 2000).

Medicinal herbs and their phytochemicals are potential novel leads for developing antiangiogenic drugs. Jeong et al., (2011) conducted a review that aimed to assess the current status of research with medicinal herbs and their phytochemicals for the development of antiangiogenic agents for cancer and other angiogenesis-related diseases including inflammation, diabetic retinopathy, endometriosis and obesity. Most studies reviewed have focused on vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)/vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2 (VEGFR-2) signaling for endothelial response processes and have led to the identification of many potential antiangiogenic agents.

Since human clinical trials with antiangiogenic modalities targeting VEGF/VEGFR-2 signaling have shown limited efficacy and occasional toxic side effects, screening strategies for herbal phytochemicals based on other signaling pathways important for cancer-endothelial and stromal crosstalks should be emphasized in the future.

Reference

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Chae JK, Kim I, Lim ST, et al. (2000) Coadministration of angiopoietin-1 and vascular endothelial growth factor enhances collateral vascularization. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol. 2000 Dec; 20(12): 2573-8.

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Heldin C-H, Rubin K, Pietras K & Östman A. High interstitial fluid pressure — an obstacle in cancer therapy. Nature Reviews Cancer 4, 806-813 (October 2004) doi:10.1038/nrc1456

Jung YD, Liu W, Reinmuth N, et al. (2001) Vascular endothelial growth factor is up-regulated by interleukin-1 beta in human vascular smooth muscle cells via the P38 mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway. Angiogenesis. 2001;4(2):155-62.

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Cordyceps sinensis

The aqueous extract of Cordyceps sinensis (Cs), one of the traditional Chinese medicines, has been used for the treatment of a wide range of disorders for centuries. It is generally accepted that its cultivated Cs fungi possess the same functions as Cs natural herbs. Although polysaccharide from Cs is one of its bioactive compositions, its antitumor ability has not been confirmed. In a study, Yang et al., (2005) investigated the effects of the exopolysaccharide fraction (EPSF) of a cultivated Cs fungus on c-Myc, c-Fos, and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) expression of tumor-bearing mice. The mice (C57BL/6) were administered three different doses of EPSF peritoneally every 2 days, starting from the day of implantation of B16 melanoma cells through their tail veins for 27 days (14 times).

Sections from mouse paraffin-embedded liver and lung tissues were subjected to immunohistochemical analyses. The results of c-Myc, c-Fos, and VEGF expression were analyzed using SimplePCI image analysis software. The c-Myc, c-Fos, and VEGF levels in the lungs and livers of EPSF-treated mice were found to be significantly lower than those of untreated mice (p<0.05). This suggests that EPSF had inhibited tumor growth in the lungs and livers of mice, and that it might be a potential adjuvant in cancer therapy.

Reference

Yang J, Zhang W, Shi P, Chen J, Han X, Wang Y. (2005) Effects of exopolysaccharide fraction (EPSF) from a cultivated Cordyceps sinensis fungus on c-Myc, c-Fos, and VEGF expression in B16 melanoma-bearing mice.

Pathol Res Pract. 2005;201(11):745-50. Epub 2005 Oct 19.

Ligustrazine

Ligustrazine is isolated from Ligustici Chuangxiong and can significantly inhibit the growth of vascular endothelial cell line (VEC-304), induce VEC-304 apoptosis and down-regulate the expression of VEGF (Peng, Jiang, & Wu, 2006).

Reference

Peng J, Jiang D, & Wu Y. (2006) Effect of Ligustrazine on Apoptosis of Expression of VEGF Gene in Blood Vessel Endothelial Cells. Zhong Hua Shi Yong Zhong Xi Yi Zha Zhi, 19(21), 2562–2564.

Ginsenoside Rg2

Ginseng saponins 20(S)-ginsenoside Rg2 extracted from cultured Panax notoginseng cells in a fermenter show a protection effect on human umbilical cord vein endothelial cells (VEC-304) from H2O2-induced cell apoptosis. When 50 mg/ml 20(S)-ginsenoside Rg2 was present in the culture medium for 8 h, the H2O2-damaged VEC-304 cells acquired about 11-fold ( p < 0.01) on the amount and about 2-fold ( p < 0.05) increase in PA activity compared with those untreated cells. And the Rg2 has a strong ability in scavenging intracellular ROS induced by H2O2 (Xin et al., 2005).

Reference

Xin Xj, Zhong Jj, Wei Dz, Liu Jw. (2005) Protection effect of 20(S)-ginsenoside Rg2 extracted from cultured Panax notoginseng cells on hydrogen peroxide-induced cytotoxity of human umbilical cord vein endothelial cells in vitro. Process Biochemistry 40 (2005) 3202–3205