Category Archives: Multi-drug resistance

Wogonin

Cancer:
Breast, lung (NSCLC), gallbladder carcinoma, osteosarcoma, colon, cervical

Action: Neuro-protective, anti-lymphangiogenesis, anti-angiogenic, anti-estrogenic, chemo-sensitizer, pro-oxidative, hypoxia-induced drug resistance, anti-metastatic, anti-tumor, anti-inflammatory

Wogonin is a plant monoflavonoid isolated from Scutellaria rivularis (Benth.) and Scutellaria baicalensis (Georgi).

Breast Cancer; ER+ & ER-

Effects of wogonin were examined in estrogen receptor (ER)-positive and -negative human breast cancer cells in culture for proliferation, cell-cycle progression, and apoptosis. Cell growth was attenuated by wogonin (50-200 microM), independently of its ER status, in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. Apoptosis was enhanced and accompanied by up-regulation of PARP and Caspase 3 cleavages as well as pro-apoptotic Bax protein. Akt activity was suppressed and reduced phosphorylation of its substrates, GSK-3beta and p27, was observed. Suppression of Cyclin D1 expression suggested the down-regulation of the Akt-mediated canonical Wnt signaling pathway.

ER expression was down-regulated in ER-positive cells, while c-ErbB2 expression and its activity were suppressed in ER-negative SK-BR-3 cells. Wogonin feeding to mice showed inhibition of tumor growth of T47D and MDA-MB-231 xenografts by up to 88% without any toxicity after 4 weeks of treatment. As wogonin was effective both in vitro and in vivo, our novel findings open the possibility of wogonin as an effective therapeutic and/or chemo-preventive agent against both ER-positive and -negative breast cancers, particularly against the more aggressive and hormonal therapy-resistant ER-negative types (Chung et al., 2008).

Neurotransmitter Action

Kim et al. (2011) found that baicalein and wogonin activated the TREK-2 current by increasing the opening frequency (channel activity: from 0.05 ± 0.01 to 0.17 ± 0.06 in baicalein treatment and from 0.03 ± 0.01 to 0.29 ± 0.09 in wogonin treatment), while leaving the single-channel conductance and mean open time unchanged. Baicalein continuously activated TREK-2, whereas wogonin transiently activated TREK-2. Application of baicalein and wogonin activated TREK-2 in both cell attached and excised patches, suggesting that baicalein and wogonin may modulate TREK-2 either directly or indirectly with different mechanisms. These results suggest that baicalein- and wogonin-induced TREK-2 activation help set the resting membrane potential of cells exposed to pathological conditions and thus may give beneficial effects in neuroprotection.

Anti-metastasic

The migration and invasion assay was used to evaluate the anti-metastasis effect of wogonin. Wogonin at the dose of 1–10 µM, which did not induce apoptosis, significantly inhibited the mobility and invasion activity of human gallbladder carcinoma GBC-SD cells. In addition, the expressions of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-2, MMP-9 and phosphorylated extracellular regulated protein kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2) but not phosphorylated Akt were dramatically suppressed by wogonin in a concentration-dependent manner. Furthermore, the metastasis suppressor maspin was confirmed as the downstream target of wogonin.

These findings suggest that wogonin inhibits cell mobility and invasion by up-regulating the metastasis suppressor maspin. Together, these data provide novel insights into the chemo-protective effect of wogonin, a main active ingredient of Chinese medicine Scutellaria baicalensis (Dong et al., 2011).

Anti-tumor and Anti-metastatic

Kimura & Sumiyoshi (2012) examined the effects of wogonin isolated from Scutellaria baicalensis roots on tumor growth and metastasis using a highly metastatic model in osteosarcoma LM8-bearing mice. Wogonin (25 and 50mg/kg, twice daily) reduced tumor growth and metastasis to the lung, liver and kidney, angiogenesis (CD31-positive cells), lymphangiogenesis (LYVE-1-positive cells), and TAM (F4/80-positive cell) numbers in the tumors of LM8-bearing mice. Wogonin (10–100µM) also inhibited increases in IL-1β production and cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 expression induced by lipopolysaccharide in THP-1 macrophages. The anti-tumor and anti-metastatic actions of wogonin may be associated with the inhibition of VEGF-C-induced lymphangiogenesis through a reduction in VEGF-C-induced VEGFR-3 phosphorylation by the inhibition of COX-2 expression and IL-1β production in Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs).

Anti-inflammatory

Wogonin extracted from Scutellariae baicalensis and S. barbata is a cell-permeable and orally available flavonoid that displays anti-inflammatory properties. Wogonin is reported to suppress the release of NO by iNOS, PGE2 by COX-2, pro-inflammatory cytokines, and MCP-1 gene expression and NF-kB activation (Chen et al., 2008).

Hypoxia-Induced Drug Resistance (MDR)

Hypoxia-induced drug resistance is a major obstacle in the development of effective cancer therapy. The reversal abilities of wogonin on   hypoxia resistance were examined and the underlying mechanisms discovered. MTT assay revealed that hypoxia increased maximal 1.71-, 2.08-, and 2.15-fold of IC50 toward paclitaxel, ADM, and DDP in human colon cancer cell lines HCT116, respectively. Furthermore, wogonin showed strong reversal potency in HCT116 cells in hypoxia and the RF reached 2.05. Hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α) can activate the expression of target genes involved in glycolysis. Wogonin decreased the expression of glycolysis-related proteins (HKII, PDHK1, LDHA), glucose uptake, and lactate generation in a dose-dependent manner.

In summary, wogonin could be a good candidate for the development of a new multi-drug resistance (MDR) reversal agent and its reversal mechanism probably is due to the suppression of HIF-1α expression via inhibiting PI3K/Akt signaling pathway (Wang et al., 2013).

NSCLC

Wogonin, a flavonoid originated from Scutellaria baicalensis Georgi, has been shown to enhance TRAIL-induced apoptosis in malignant cells in in vitro studies. In this study, the effect of a combination of TRAIL and wogonin was tested in a non-small-cell lung cancer xenografted tumor model in nude mice. Consistent with the in vitro study showing that wogonin sensitized A549 cells to TRAIL-induced apoptosis, wogonin greatly enhanced TRAIL-induced suppression of tumor growth, accompanied with increased apoptosis in tumor tissues as determined by TUNEL assay.

The down-regulation of these antiapoptotic proteins was likely mediated by proteasomal degradation that involved intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS), because wogonin robustly induced ROS accumulation and ROS scavengers butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA) and N-acetyl-L-cysteine (NAC) and the proteasome inhibitor MG132 restored the expression of these antiapoptotic proteins in cells co-treated with wogonin and TRAIL.

These results show for the first time that wogonin enhances TRAIL's anti-tumor activity in vivo, suggesting this strategy has an application potential for clinical anti-cancer therapy (Yang et al., 2013).

Colon Cancer

Following treatment with baicalein or wogonin, several apoptotic events were observed, including DNA fragmentation, chromatin condensation and increased cell-cycle arrest in the G1 phase. Baicalein and wogonin decreased Bcl-2 expression, whereas the expression of Bax was increased in a dose-dependent manner compared with the control. Furthermore, the induction of apoptosis was accompanied by an inactivation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/Akt in a dose-dependent manner.

The administration of baicalein to mice resulted in the inhibition of the growth of HT-29 xenografts without any toxicity following 5 weeks of treatment. The results indicated that baicalein induced apoptosis via Akt activation in a p53-dependent manner in the HT-29 colon cancer cells and that it may serve as a chemo-preventive or therapeutic agent for HT-29 colon cancer (Kim et al., 2012).

Breast

The involvement of insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) and estrogen receptor α (ERα) in the inhibitory effect of wogonin on the breast adenocarcinoma growth was determined. Moreover, the effect of wogonin on the angiogenesis of chick chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) was also investigated. The results showed wogonin and ICI182780 both exhibited a potent ability to blunt IGF-1-stimulated MCF-7 cell growth. Either of wogonin and ICI182780 significantly inhibited ERα and p-Akt expressions in IGF-1-treated cells. The inhibitory effect of wogonin showed no difference from that of ICI182780 on IGF-1-stimulated expressions of ERα and p-Akt. Meanwhile, wogonin at different concentrations showed significant inhibitory effect on CAM angiogenesis.

These results suggest the inhibitory effect of wogonin on breast adenocarcinoma growth via inhibiting IGF-1-mediated PI3K-Akt pathway and regulating ERα expression. Furthermore, wogonin has a strong anti-angiogenic effect on CAM model (Ma et al., 2012).

Chemoresistance; Cervical Cancer, NSCLC

Chemoresistance to cisplatin is a major limitation of cisplatin-based chemotherapy in the clinic. The combination of cisplatin with other agents has been recognized as a promising strategy to overcome cisplatin resistance. Previous studies have shown that wogonin (5,7-dihydroxy-8-methoxyflavone), a flavonoid isolated from the root of the medicinal herb Scutellaria baicalensis Georgi, sensitizes cancer cells to chemotheraputics such as etoposide, adriamycin, tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) and TNF.

In this study, the non-small-cell lung cancer cell line A549 and the cervical cancer cell line HeLa were treated with wogonin or cisplatin individually or in combination. It was found for the first time that wogonin is able to sensitize cisplatin-induced apoptosis in both A549 cells and HeLa cells as indicated by the potentiation of activation of caspase-3, and cleavage of the caspase-3 substrate PARP in wogonin and cisplatin co-treated cells.

Results provided important new evidence supporting the potential use of wogonin as a cisplatin sensitizer for cancer therapy (He et al., 2012).

References

Chen LG, Hung LY, Tsai KW, et al. (2008). Wogonin, a bioactive flavonoid in herbal tea, inhibits inflammatory cyclooxygenase-2 gene expression in human lung epithelial cancer cells. Mol Nutr Food Res. 52:1349-1357.


Chung H, Jung YM, Shin DH, et al. (2008). Anti-cancer effects of wogonin in both estrogen receptor-positive and -negative human breast cancer cell lines in vitro and in nude mice xenografts. Int J Cancer, 122(4):816-22.


Dong P, Zhang Y, Gu J, et al. (2011). Wogonin, an active ingredient of Chinese herb medicine Scutellaria baicalensis, inhibits the mobility and invasion of human gallbladder carcinoma GBC-SD cells by inducing the expression of maspin. J Ethnopharmacol, 137(3):1373-80. doi: 10.1016/j.jep.2011.08.005.


He F, Wang Q, Zheng XL, et al. (2012). Wogonin potentiates cisplatin-induced cancer cell apoptosis through accumulation of intracellular reactive oxygen species. Oncology Reports, 28(2), 601-605. doi: 10.3892/or.2012.1841.


Kim EJ, Kang D, Han J. (2011). Baicalein and wogonin are activators of rat TREK-2 two-pore domain K+ channel. Acta Physiologica, 202(2):185–192. doi: 10.1111/j.1748-1716.2011.02263.x.


Kim SJ, Kim HJ, Kim HR, et al. (2012). Anti-tumor actions of baicalein and wogonin in HT-29 human colorectal cancer cells. Mol Med Rep, 6(6):1443-9. doi: 10.3892/mmr.2012.1085.


Kimura Y & Sumiyoshi M. (2012). Anti-tumor and anti-metastatic actions of wogonin isolated from Scutellaria baicalensis roots through anti-lymphangiogenesis. Phytomedicine, 20(3-4):328-336. doi:10.1016/j.phymed.2012.10.016


Ma X, Xie KP, Shang F, et al. (2012). Wogonin inhibits IGF-1-stimulated cell growth and estrogen receptor α expression in breast adenocarcinoma cell and angiogenesis of chick chorioallantoic membrane. Sheng Li Xue Bao, 64(2):207-12.


Wang H, Zhao L, Zhu LT, et al. (2013). Wogonin reverses hypoxia resistance of human colon cancer HCT116 cells via down-regulation of HIF-1α and glycolysis, by inhibiting PI3K/Akt signaling pathway. Mol Carcinog. doi: 10.1002/mc.22052.


Yang L, Wang Q, Li D, et al. (2013). Wogonin enhances anti-tumor activity of tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand in vivo through ROS-mediated down-regulation of cFLIPL and IAP proteins. Apoptosis, 18(5):618-26. doi: 10.1007/s10495-013-0808-8.

Tetrandrine

Cancer:
Breast, leukemia, Oral cancer, renal cell carcinoma, colon

Action: Anti-inflammatory, tamoxifen resistance, cell-cycle arrest, anti-metastatic, MDR

Tetrandrine, a bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloid from the root of Stephania tetrandra (S, Moore), exhibits a broad range of pharmacological activities, including immunomodulating, anti-hepatofibrogenetic, anti-inflammatory, anti-arrhythmic, anti-portal hypertension, anti-cancer and neuro-protective activities (Li, Wang, & Lu, 2001; Ji, 2011). Tetrandrine has anti-inflammatory and anti-fibrogenic actions, which make tetrandrine and related compounds potentially useful in the treatment of lung silicosis, liver cirrhosis, and rheumatoid arthritis (Kwan & Achike, 2002).

Tetrandrine generally presents its anti-cancer effects in micromolar concentrations. Tetrandrine induces different phases of cell-cycle arrest, depends on cancer cell types (Kuo & Lin, 2003; Meng et al., 2004; Ng et al., 2006) and also induces apoptosis in many human cancer cells, including leukemia, bladder, colon, hepatoma, and lung (Lai et al., 1998; Ng et al., 2006; Wu et al., 2010; He et al., 2011).

In vivo experiments have also demonstrated the potential value of tetrandrine against cancer activity. For example, the survival of mice subcutaneously inoculated with CT-26 cells is extended after daily oral gavage of 50 mg/kg or 150  mg/kg of tetrandrine (Wu et al., 2010). Tetrandrine also inhibits the expression of VEGF in glioma cells, has cytotoxic effect on ECV304 human umbilical vein endothelial cells, and suppresses in vivo angiogenesis (Chen et al., 2009). Tetrandrine-treated mice (10  mg/kg/day) have fewer metastases than vehicle-treated mice, and no acute toxicity or obvious changes can be observed in the body weight of both groups (Chang et al., 2004).

Leukemia

Tetrandrine citrate is a novel orally active tetrandrine salt with potent anti-tumor activity against IM-resistant K562 cells and chronic myeloid leukemia. Tetrandrine citrate-induced growth inhibition of leukemia cells may be involved in the depletion of p210Bcr-Abl mRNA and β-catenin protein (Xu et al., 2012).

Comparative in vitro studies show that tetrandrine has significantly greater suppressive effects on adherence, locomotion and 3H-deoxyglucose uptake of neutrophils, as well as the mitogen-induced lymphocyte responses and mixed lymphocyte reactions. By contrast, berbamine demonstrated a significantly greater capacity for inhibition of NK cell cytotoxicity. These results show that tetrandrine is superior to berbamine in most aspects of anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive activity.

Since these two alkaloids differ by only one substitution in the side chain of one of the benzene rings, these findings may provide further insight into structure-activity relationships and clues to the synthesis and development of active analogues of this promising class of drugs for the treatment of chronic inflammatory diseases (Li et al., 1989).

MDR, Breast Cancer

Tetrandrine also has been found to have extensive pharmacological activity, including positive ion channel blockade and inhibition of multiple drug resistance proteins. These activities are very similar to that of salinomycin, a known drug targeting breast cancer initiation cells (TICs). Tetrandrine has been probed for this activity, targeting of breast cancer TICs. SUM-149, an inflammatory breast cancer cell line, and SUM-159, a non-inflammatory metaplastic breast cancer cell line, were used in these studies.

In summary, tetrandrine demonstrates significant efficacy against in vitro surrogates for inflammatory and aggressive breast cancer TICs (Xu et al., 2011).

Leukemia, MDR

The potential mechanism of the chemotherapy resistance in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is the multi-drug resistance (MDR-1) gene product P-glycoprotein (P-gp), which is often overexpressed in myeloblasts from acute myeloid leukemia. In a multi-center clinical trial, 38 patients with poor risk forms of AML were treated with tetrandrine (TET), a potent inhibitor of the MDR-1 efflux pump, combined with daunorubicin (DNR), etoposide and cytarabine (TET–DEC). Overall, postchemotherapy marrow hypoplasia was achieved in 36 patients. Sixteen patients (42%) achieved complete remission or restored chronic phase, 9 achieved partial remission (PR) and 13 failed therapy.

These data indicate that TET–DEC was relatively well tolerated in these patients with poor risk AML, and had encouraging anti-leukemic effects (Xu et al., 2006).

Tamoxifen

Tetrandrine (Tet) had a significant reversal of tamoxifen drug resistance breast cancer cells resistant (MCF-7/TAM). The non-cytotoxic dose (0. 625 microg/mL) reversed the resistance by 2.0 folds. MRP1 was reduced at gene (P <0.05) and protein levels when Tet effected on MCF-7ITAM cells. Tet could reverse the drug resistance of MCF-7/TAM cells, and the reverse mechanism may be related to down-regulating MRP1 expression (Chen & Chen, 2013).

Colon Cancer

Tetrandrine (TET) exhibits anti-colon cancer activity. Gao et al. (2013) compared TET with chemotherapy drug doxorubicin in 4T1 tumor-bearing BALB/c mice model and found that TET exhibits anti-cancer metastatic and anti-angiogenic activities better than those of doxorubicin. Local blood perfusion of tumor was markedly decreased by TET after 3 weeks.

Mechanistically, TET treatment leads to a decrease in p-ERK level and an increase in NF- κ B levels in HUVECs. TET also regulated metastatic and angiogenic related proteins, including vascular endothelial growth factor, hypoxia-inducible factor-1 α, integrin β 5, endothelial cell specific molecule-1, and intercellular adhesion molecule-1 in vivo (Chen & Chen, 2013).

Tetrandrine significantly decreased the viability of SAS human oral cancer cells in a concentration- and time-dependent manner. Tet induced nuclear condensation, demonstrated by DAPI staining, and induces apoptosis and autophagy of SAS human cancer cells via caspase-dependent and LC3-I and LC3-II “American Typewriter”; “American Typewriter”;‑dependent pathways (Huang et al., 2013).

Renal Cancer

Tetrandrine treatment showed growth-inhibitory effects on human renal cell carcinoma (RCC) in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Additionally, flow cytometric studies revealed that tetrandrine was capable of inducing G1 cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis in RCC cells. Tet triggered apoptosis and cell-cycle arrest in RCC 786-O, 769-P and ACHN cells in vitro; these events are associated with caspase cascade activation and up-regulation of p21 and p27 (Chen, Ji, & Chen, 2013).

References

Chang KH, Liao HF, Chang HH, et al. (2004). Inhibitory effect of tetrandrine on pulmonary metastases in CT26 colorectal adenocarcinoma-bearing BALB/c mice. American Journal of Chinese Medicine, 32(6):863–872.


Chen HY, Chen XY. (2013). Tetrandrine reversed the resistance of tamoxifen in human breast cancer MCF-7/TAM cells: an experimental research. Zhongguo Zhong Xi Yi Jie He Za Zhi, 33(4):488-91.


Chen T, Ji B, Chen Y. (2013). Tetrandrine triggers apoptosis and cell-cycle arrest in human renal cell carcinoma cells. J Nat Med.


Chen Y, Chen JC, Tseng SH. (2009). Tetrandrine suppresses tumor growth and angiogenesis of gliomas in rats. International Journal of Cancer, 124(10):2260–2269.


Gao JL, Ji X, He TC, et al. (2013). Tetrandrine Suppresses Cancer Angiogenesis and Metastasis in 4T1 Tumor-bearing Mice. Evid Based Complement Alternat Med, 2013:265061. doi: 10.1155/2013/265061.


He BC, Gao JL, Zhang BQ, et al. (2011). Tetrandrine inhibits Wnt/beta-catenin signaling and suppresses tumor growth of human colorectal cancer. Molecular Pharmacology, 79(2):211–219.


Huang AC, Lien JC, Lin MW, et al. (2013). Tetrandrine induces cell death in SAS human oral cancer cells through caspase activation-dependent apoptosis and LC3-I and LC3-II activation-dependent autophagy. Int J Oncol, 43(2):485-94. doi: 10.3892/ijo.2013.1952.


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


Kwan CY, Achike FI. (2002). Tetrandrine and related bis-benzylisoquinoline alkaloids from medicinal herbs: cardiovascular effects and mechanisms of action. Acta Pharmacol Sin, 23(12):1057-68.


Kuo PL and Lin CC. (2003). Tetrandrine-induced cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis in Hep G2 cells. Life Sciences, 73(2):243–252.


Lai YL, Chen YJ, Wu TY, et al. (1998). Induction of apoptosis in human leukemic U937 cells by tetrandrine. Anti-Cancer Drugs, 9(1):77–81.


Li SY, Ling LH, The BS, Seow WK and Thong YH. (1989). Anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive properties of the bis-benzylisoquinolines: In vitro comparisons of tetrandrine and berbamine. International Journal of Immunopharmacology, 11(4):395-401 doi:10.1016/0192-0561(89)90086-6.


Meng LH, Zhang H, Hayward L, et al. (2004). Tetrandrine induces early G1 arrest in human colon carcinoma cells by down-regulating the activity and inducing the degradation of G 1-S-specific cyclin-dependent kinases and by inducing p53 and p21Cip1. Cancer Research, 64(24):9086–9092.


Ng LT, Chiang LC, Lin YT, and C. C. Lin CC. (2006). Anti-proliferative and apoptotic effects of tetrandrine on different human hepatoma cell lines. American Journal of Chinese Medicine, 34(1):125–135.


Wu JM, Chen Y, Chen JC, Lin TY, Tseng SH. (2010). Tetrandrine induces apoptosis and growth suppression of colon cancer cells in mice. Cancer Letters, 287(2):187–195.


Xu WL, Shen HL, Ao ZF, et al. (2006). Combination of tetrandrine as a potential-reversing agent with daunorubicin, etoposide and cytarabine for the treatment of refractory and relapsed acute myelogenous leukemia. Leukemia Research, 30(4):407-413.


Xu W, Debeb BG, Lacerda L, Li J, Woodward WA. (2011). Tetrandrine, a Compound Common in Chinese Traditional Medicine, Preferentially Kills Breast Cancer Tumor Initiating Cells (TICs) In Vitro. Cancers, 3:2274-2285; doi:10.3390/cancers3022274.


Xu XH, Gan YC, Xu GB, et al. (2012). Tetrandrine citrate eliminates imatinib-resistant chronic myeloid leukemia cells in vitro and in vivo by inhibiting Bcr-Abl/ β-catenin axis. Journal of Zhejiang University SCIENCE B, 13(11):867-874.

Schisandrin

Cancer: Leukemia, breast

Action: Anti-metastatic, cardio-protective, MDR, CYP3A, cell-cycle arrest

Leukemia

Schisandrin B (Sch B) has previously been demonstrated to be a novel P-glycoprotein (P-gp) inhibitor. Recent investigation revealed that Sch B was also an effective inhibitor of the multi-drug resistance-associated protein 1 (MRP1). Sch B's ability to reverse MRP1-mediated drug resistance was tested using HL60/ADR and HL60/MRP human promyelocytic leukemia cell lines, with the overexpression of MRP1 but not P-gp. At the equimolar concentration, Sch B demonstrated significantly stronger potency than the drug probenecid, a MRP1 inhibitor (Sun, Xu, Lu, Pan & Hu, 2007).

Up-regulates CYP3A

The ability of Schisandrin B (Sch B) to modulate cytochrome P450 3A activity (CYP3A) and alter the pharmacokinetic profiles of CYP3A substrate (midazolam) was investigated in vivo in treated rats. Rats were routinely administered with physiological saline (negative control group), ketoconazole (75mg/kg, positive control group), or varying doses of Sch B (experimental groups) for 3 consecutive days. Thereafter, changes in hepatic microsomal CYP3A activity and the pharmacokinetic profiles of midazolam and 1′-hydroxy midazolam in plasma were studied to evaluate CYP3A activity.

The results indicated that Sch B had a significant dose-dependent effect on inhibition of rat hepatic microsomal CYP3A activity. These results suggest that a 3-day treatment of Sch B could increase concentration and oral bioavailability of drugs metabolized by CYP3A (Li, Xin, Yu, & Wu, 2013).

Attenuates Metastasis

NADPH oxidase 4 (NOX4) is a potential target for intervention of cancer metastasis, as reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated by this enzyme plays important roles in TGF-β signaling, an important inducer of cancer metastasis. Zhang, Liu & Hu (2013) show that TGF-β induces ROS production in breast cancer 4T1 cells and enhances cell migration; that the effect of TGF- β depends on NOX4 expression; and that knockdown of NOX4 via RNAi significantly decreases the migration ability of 4T1 cells in the presence or absence of TGF-β and significantly attenuates distant metastasis of 4T1 cells to lung and bone.

Sch B significantly suppresses the lung and bone metastasis of 4T1 cells via inhibiting EMT, suggesting its potential application in targeting the process of cancer metastasis. Sch B significantly suppressed the spontaneous lung and bone metastasis of 4T1 cells inoculated s.c. without significant effect on primary tumor growth and significantly extended the survival time of the mice. Sch B did not inhibit lung metastasis of 4T1 cells that were injected via tail vein. Delayed start of treatment with Sch B in mice with pre-existing tumors did not reduce lung metastasis. These results suggested that Sch B acted at the step of local invasion (Liu et al., 2012).

Cardiotoxicity Protective/ Attenuates Metastasis

Sch B is capable of protecting Dox-induced chronic cardiotoxicity and enhancing its anti-cancer activity. To the best of our knowledge, Sch B is the only molecule ever proved to function as a cardio-protective agent as well as a chemotherapeutic sensitizer, which is potentially applicable for cancer treatment.

Pre-treatment with Sch B significantly attenuated Dox-induced loss of cardiac function and damage of cardiomyocytic structure. Sch B substantially enhanced Dox cytotoxicities toward S180 in vitro and in vivo in mice, and increased Dox cytotoxcity against 4T1 in vitro. Although we did not observe this enhancement against the implanted 4T1 primary tumor, the spontaneous metastasis to lung was significantly reduced in combined treatment group compared to Dox alone group (Xu et al., 2011).

Cell-cycle Arrest/Breast Cancer

Schizandrin inhibits cell proliferation through the induction of cell-cycle arrest with modulating cell-cycle-related proteins in human breast cancer cells. Schizandrin exhibited growth-inhibitory activities in cultured human breast cancer cells, and the effect was the more profound in estrogen receptor (ER)-positive T47D cells than in ER-negative MDA-MB-231 cells. When treated with the compound in T47D cells, schizandrin induced the accumulation of a cell population in the G0/G1 phase, which was further demonstrated by the induction of CDK inhibitors p21 and p27 and the inhibition of the expression of cell-cycle checkpoint proteins including cyclin D1, cyclin A, CDK2 and CDK4 (Kim et al., 2010).

References

Kim SJ, Min HY, Lee EJ, et al. (2010). Growth inhibition and cell-cycle arrest in the G0/G1 by schizandrin, a dibenzocyclooctadiene lignan isolated from Schisandra chinensis, on T47D human breast cancer cells. Phytother Res, 24(2):193-7. doi: 10.1002/ptr.2907.


Li WL, Xin HW, Yu AR, Wu XC. (2013). In vivo effect of Schisandrin B on cytochrome P450 enzyme activity. Phytomedicine, 20(8), 760-765


Liu Z, Zhang B, Liu K, Ding Z, Hu X. (2012). Schisandrin B attenuates cancer invasion and metastasis via inhibiting epithelial-mesenchymal transition. PLoS One, 7(7):e40480. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0040480.


Sun M, Xu X, Lu Q, Pan Q, Hu X. (2007). Schisandrin B: A dual inhibitor of P-glycoprotein and Multi-drug resistance-associated protein 1. Cancer Letters, 246(1-2), 300-307.


Xu Y, Liu Z, Sun J, et al. (2011). Schisandrin B prevents doxorubicin-induced chronic cardiotoxicity and enhances its anti-cancer activity in vivo. PLoS One, 6(12):e28335. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0028335.


Zhang B, Liu Z, Hu X. (2013). Inhibiting cancer metastasis via targeting NAPDH oxidase 4. Biochem Pharmacol, 86(2):253-66. doi: 10.1016/j.bcp.2013.05.011.

Salvianolic acid-B / Salvinal

Cancer:
Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, oral squamous cell carcinoma, glioma

Action: MDR, reduction of cardiotoxicity, COX-2 inhibitor, inflammatory-associated tumor development, anti-cancer

Salvia miltiorrhiza contains a variety of anti-tumor active ingredients, such as the water-soluble components, salvianolic acid A, salvianolic acid B, salvinal, and liposoluble constituents, tanshinone I, tanshinone IIA, dihydrotanshinone I, miltirone, cryptotanshinone, ailantholide, neo-tanshinlactone, and nitrogen-containing compounds. These anti-tumor active components play important roles in the different stages of tumor evolution, progression and metastasis (Zhang & Lu, 2010).

Anti-cancer/MDR

Aqueous extracts of Salvia miltiorrhizae Bunge have been extensively used in the treatment of cardiovascular disorders and cancer in Asia. Recently, a compound, 5-(3-hydroxypropyl)-7-methoxy-2-(3'-methoxy-4'-hydroxyphenyl)-3-benzo[b]furancarbaldehyde (salvinal), isolated from this plant showed inhibitory activity against tumor cell growth and induced apoptosis in human cancer cells. In the present study, we investigated the cytotoxic effect and mechanisms of action of salvinal in human cancer cell lines. Salvinal caused inhibition of cell growth (IC50 range, 4-17 microM) in a variety of human cancer cell lines.

In particular, salvinal exhibited similar inhibitory activity against parental KB, P-glycoprotein-overexpressing KB vin10 and KB taxol-50 cells, and multi-drug resistance-associated protein (MRP)-expressing etoposide-resistant KB 7D cells.

Taken together, our data demonstrate that salvinal inhibits tubulin polymerization, arrests cell-cycle at mitosis, and induces apoptosis. Notably, Salvinal is a poor substrate for transport by P-glycoprotein and MRP. Salvinal may be useful in the treatment of human cancers, particularly in patients with drug resistance (Chang et al., 2004).

Glioma

Salvianolic acid B (SalB) has been shown to exert anti-cancer effect in several cancer cell lines. SalB increased the phosphorylation of p38 MAPK and p53 in a dose-dependent manner. Moreover, blocking p38 activation by specific inhibitor SB203580 or p38 specific siRNA partly reversed the anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic effects, and ROS production induced by SalB treatment.

These findings extended the anti-cancer effect of SalB in human glioma cell lines, and suggested that these inhibitory effects of SalB on U87 glioma cell growth might be associated with p38 activation mediated ROS generation. Thus, SalB might be concerned as an effective and safe natural anti-cancer agent for glioma prevention and treatment (Wang et al., 2013).

Reduced Cardiotoxicity

Clinical attempts to reduce the cardiotoxicity of arsenic trioxide (ATO) without compromising its anti-cancer activities remain an unresolved issue. In this study, Wang et al., (2013b) determined that Sal B can protect against ATO-induced cardiac toxicity in vivo and increase the toxicity of ATO toward cancer cells.

The combination treatment significantly enhanced the ATO-induced cytotoxicity and apoptosis of HepG2 cells and HeLa cells. Increases in apoptotic marker cleaved poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase and decreases in procaspase-3 expressions were observed through Western blot. Taken together, these observations indicate that the combination treatment of Sal B and ATO is potentially applicable for treating cancer with reduced cardiotoxic side effects.

Oral Cancer

Sal B has inhibitory effect on oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) cell growth. The anti-tumor effect can be attributed to anti-angiogenic potential induced by a decreased expression of some key regulator genes of angiogenesis. Sal B may be a promising modality for treating oral squamous cell carcinoma.

Sal B induced growth inhibition in OSCC cell lines but had limited effects on premalignant cells. A total of 17 genes showed a greater than 3-fold change when comparing Sal B treated OSCC cells to the control. Among these genes, HIF-1α, TNFα and MMP9 are specifically inhibited; expression of THBS2 was up-regulated (Yang et al., 2011).

Head and Neck Cancer

Overexpression of cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) in oral mucosa has been associated with increased risk of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). Celecoxib is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug, which inhibits COX-2 but not COX-1. This selective COX-2 inhibitor holds promise as a cancer-preventive agent. Concerns about the cardiotoxicity of celecoxib limit its use in long-term chemo-prevention and therapy. Salvianolic acid B (Sal-B) is a leading bioactive component of Salvia miltiorrhiza Bge, which is used for treating neoplastic and chronic inflammatory diseases in China.

Tumor volumes in Sal-B treated group were significantly lower than those in celecoxib treated or untreated control groups (p < 0.05). Sal-B inhibited COX-2 expression in cultured HNSCC cells and in HNSCC cells isolated from tumor xenografts. Sal-B also caused dose-dependent inhibition of prostaglandin E(2) synthesis, either with or without lipopolysaccharide stimulation. Taking these results together, Sal-B shows promise as a COX-2 targeted anti-cancer agent for HNSCC prevention and treatment (Hao et al., 2009).

Inflammatory-associated tumor development

A half-dose of daily Sal-B (40 mg/kg/d) and celecoxib (2.5 mg/kg/d) significantly inhibited JHU-013 xenograft growth relative to mice treated with a full dose of Sal-B or celecoxib alone. The combination was associated with profound inhibition of COX-2 and enhanced induction of apoptosis. Taken together, these results strongly suggest that a combination of Sal-B, a multifunctional anti-cancer agent, with low-dose celecoxib holds potential as a new preventive strategy in targeting inflammatory-associated tumor development (Zhao et al., 2010).

Squamous Cell Carcinoma

The results showed that Sal B significantly decreased the squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) incidence from 64.7 (11/17) to 16.7% (3/18) (P=0.004); angiogenesis was inhibited in dysplasia and SCC (P<0.01), with a simultaneous decrease in the immunostaining of hypoxia-inducible factor 1alpha and vascular endothelium growth factor protein (P<0.05). The results suggested that Sal B had inhibitory effect against the malignant transformation of oral precancerous lesion and such inhibition may be related to the inhibition of angiogenesis (Zhou, Yang, & Ge, 2006).

References

Chang JY, Chang CY, Kuo CC, et al. (2004). Salvinal, a novel microtubule inhibitor isolated from Salvia miltiorrhizae Bunge (Danshen), with antimitotic activity in Multi-drug-sensitive and -resistant human tumor cells. Mol Pharmacol, 65(1):77-84.


Hao Y, Xie T, Korotcov A, et al. (2009). Salvianolic acid B inhibits growth of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma in vitro and in vivo via cyclooxygenase-2 and apoptotic pathways. Int J Cancer, 124(9):2200-9. doi: 10.1002/ijc.24160.


Wang ZS, Luo P, Dai SH, et al., (2013a). Salvianolic acid B induces apoptosis in human glioma U87 cells through p38-mediated ROS generation. Cell Mol Neurobiol, 33(7):921-8. doi: 10.1007/s10571-013-9958-z.


Wang M, Sun G, Wu P, et al. (2013b). Salvianolic Acid B prevents arsenic trioxide-induced cardiotoxicity in vivo and enhances its anti-cancer activity in vitro. Evid Based Complement Alternat Med, 2013:759483. doi: 10.1155/2013/759483.


Yang Y, Ge PJ, Jiang L, Li FL, Zhum QY. (2011). Modulation of growth and angiogenic potential of oral squamous carcinoma cells in vitro using salvianolic acid B. BMC Complement Altern Med, 11:54. doi: 10.1186/1472-6882-11-54.


Zhang W, Lu Y. (2010). Advances in studies on anti-tumor activities of compounds in Salvia miltiorrhiza. Zhongguo Zhong Yao Za Zhi, 35(3):389-92.


Zhao Y, Hao Y, Ji H, Fang Y, et al. (2010). Combination effects of salvianolic acid B with low-dose celecoxib on inhibition of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma growth in vitro and in vivo. Cancer Prev Res (Phila), 3(6):787-96. doi: 10.1158/1940-6207.CAPR-09-0243.


Zhou ZT, Yang Y, Ge JP. (2006). The preventive effect of salvianolic acid B on malignant transformation of DMBA-induced oral premalignant lesion in hamsters. Carcinogenesis, 27(4):826-32.

Resveratrol 98%

Cancer:
Breast, lymphoma, breast, gastric, colorectal, esophageal, prostate, pancreatic, leukemia, skin, lung

Action: Chemoprevention, anti-inflammatory, MDR, chemotherapy-induced cytotoxicity, radio-sensitizer, enhances chemo-sensitivity

Resveratrol (RSV) is a phytoalexin found in food products including berries and grapes, as well as plants (including Fallopia japonica (Houtt.), Gnetum cleistostachyum (C. Y. Cheng), Vaccinium arboretum (Marshall), Vaccinium angustifolium (Aiton) and Vaccinium corymbosum (L.)

Although resveratrol is ubiquitous in nature, it is found in a limited number of edible substances, most notably in grapes. In turn, due to the peculiar processing methodology, resveratrol is found predominantly in red wines. Thus, resveratrol received intense and immediate attention. A large number of resveratrol anti-cancer activities were reported, affecting all the steps of cancerogenesis, namely initiation, promotion, and progression. Thereafter, an exponential number of reports on resveratrol accumulated and, so far, more than 5,000 studies have been published (Borriello et al., 2014).

Up to the end of 2011, more than 50 studies analyzed the effect of resveratrol as an anti-cancer compound in animal models of different cancers, including skin cancer (non-melanoma skin cancer and melanoma); breast, gastric, colorectal, esophageal, prostate, and pancreatic cancers; hepatoma, neuroblastoma, fibrosarcoma, and leukemia (Ahmad et al., 2004; Hayashibara et al., 2002; Pozo-Guisado et al., 2005; Mohan et al., 2006; Tang et al., 2006). In general, these preclinical studies suggest a positive activity of the molecule in lowering the progression of cancer, reducing its dimension, and decreasing the number of metastases (Vang et al., 2011).

Breast

Resveratrol was shown to have cancer chemo-preventive activity in assays representing three major stages of carcinogenesis. It has been found to mediate anti-inflammatory effects and inhibit cyclooxygenase and hydroperoxidase functions (anti-promotion activity). It has also been found to inhibit the development of pre-neoplastic lesions in carcinogen-treated mouse mammary glands in culture and inhibited tumorigenesis in a mouse skin cancer model (Jang et al., 1997).

In addition, resveratrol, a partial ER agonist itself, acts as an ER antagonist in the presence of estrogen leading to inhibition of human breast cancer cells (Lu et al., 1999).

Besides chemo-preventive effects, resveratrol appears to exhibit therapeutic effects against cancer itself. Limited data in humans have revealed that RSV is pharmacologically safe (Aggarwal et al., 2004).

Chemotherapy-Induced Cytotoxicity

RSV markedly enhanced Dox-induced cytotoxicity in MCF-7/adr and MDA-MB-231 cells. Treatment with a combination of RSV and Dox significantly increased the cellular accumulation of Dox by down-regulating the expression levels of ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter genes, MDR1, and MRP1. Further in vivo experiments in the xenograft model revealed that treatment with a combination of RSV and Dox significantly inhibited tumor volume by 60%, relative to the control group.

These results suggest that treatment with a combination of RSV and Dox would be a helpful strategy for increasing the efficacy of Dox by promoting an intracellular accumulation of Dox and decreasing multi-drug resistance in human breast cancer cells (Kim et al., 2013).

Radio-sensitizer/Lung Cancer

Previous studies indicated that resveratrol (RV) may sensitize tumor cells to chemotherapy and ionizing radiation (IR). However, the mechanisms by which RV increases the radiation sensitivity of cancer cells have not been well characterized. Here, we show that RV treatment enhances IR-induced cell killing in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cells through an apoptosis-independent mechanism. Further studies revealed that the percentage of senescence-associated β-galactosidase (SA-β-gal)-positive senescent cells was markedly higher in cells treated with IR in combination with RV compared with cells treated either with IR or RV alone, suggesting that RV treatment enhances IR-induced premature senescence in lung cancer cells.

Collectively, these results demonstrate that RV-induced radio-sensitization is associated with significant increase of ROS production, DNA-DSBs and senescence induction in irradiated NSCLC cells, suggesting that RV treatment may sensitize lung cancer cells to radiotherapy via enhancing IR-induced premature senescence (Luo et al., 2013).

Lymphoma

Ko et al. (2011) examined the effects of resveratrol on the anaplastic large-cell lymphoma (ALCL) cell line SR-786. Resveratrol inhibited growth and induced cellular differentiation, as demonstrated by morphological changes and elevated expression of T cell differentiation markers CD2, CD3, and CD8. Resveratrol also triggered cellular apoptosis, as demonstrated by morphological observations, DNA fragmentation, and cell-cycle analyzes. Further, the surface expression of the death receptor Fas/CD95 was increased by resveratrol treatment. Our data suggest that resveratrol may have potential therapeutic value for ALCL.

Skin Cancer

Treatment with combinations of resveratrol and black tea polyphenol (BTP) also decreased expression of proliferating cell nuclear antigen in mouse skin tissues/tumors than their solitary treatments as determined by immunohistochemistry. In addition, histological and cell death analysis also confirmed that resveratrol and BTP treatment together inhibits cellular proliferation and markedly induces apoptosis. Taken together, results for the first time lucidly illustrate that resveratrol and BTP in combination impart better suppressive activity than either of these agents alone and accentuate that development of novel combination therapies/chemo-prevention using dietary agents will be more beneficial against cancer (George et al., 2011).

Prostate Cancer

Resveratrol-induced ROS production, caspase-3 activity and apoptosis were inhibited by N-acetylcysteine. Bax was a major pro-apoptotic gene mediating the effects of resveratrol as Bax siRNA inhibited resveratrol-induced apoptosis. Resveratrol enhanced the apoptosis-inducing potential of TRAIL, and these effects were inhibited by either dominant negative FADD or caspase-8 siRNA. The combination of resveratrol and TRAIL enhanced the mitochondrial dysfunctions during apoptosis. These properties of resveratrol strongly suggest that it could be used either alone or in combination with TRAIL for the prevention and/or treatment of prostate cancer (Shankar et al., 2007).

Breast Cancer

Scarlatti et al. (2008) demonstrate that resveratrol acts via multiple pathways to trigger cell death, induces caspase-dependent and caspase-independent cell death in MCF-7 casp-3 cells, induces only caspase-independent cell death in MCF-7vc cells, and stimulates macroautophagy. Using BECN1 and hVPS34 (human vacuolar protein sorting 34) small interfering RNAs, they demonstrated that resveratrol activates Beclin 1-independent autophagy in both cell lines, whereas cell death via this uncommon form of autophagy occurs only in MCF-7vc cells. They also show that this variant form of autophagic cell death is blocked by the expression of caspase-3, but not by its enzymatic activity. In conclusion, this study reveals that non-canonical autophagy induced by resveratrol can act as a caspase-independent cell death mechanism in breast cancer cell.

References

Aggarwal BB, Bhardwaj A, Aggarwal RS et al. (2004). Role of Resveratrol in Prevention and Therapy of Cancer: Preclinical and Clinical Studies. Anti-cancer Research, 24(5A): 2783-2840.


Ahmad KA, Clement MV, Hanif IM, et al (2004). Resveratrol inhibits drug-induced apoptosis in human leukemia cells by creating an intracellular milieu nonpermissive for death execution. Cancer Res, 64:1452–1459


Borriello A, Bencivenga D, Caldarelli I, et al. (2014). Resveratrol: from basic studies to bedside. Cancer Treat Res, 159:167-84. doi: 10.1007/978-3-642-38007-5_10.


George J, Singh M, Srivastava AK, et al (2011). Resveratrol and black tea polyphenol combination synergistically suppress mouse skin tumors growth by inhibition of activated MAPKs and p53. PLoS ONE, 6:e23395


Hayashibara T, Yamada Y, Nakayama S, et al (2002). Resveratrol induces down-regulation in survivin expression and apoptosis in HTLV-1-infected cell lines: a prospective agent for adult T cell leukemia chemotherapy. Nutr Cancer, 44:193–201


Jang M, Cai L, Udeani GO, et al. (1997). Cancer Chemo-preventive Activity of Resveratrol, a Natural Product Derived from Grapes. Science, 275(5297):218-220.


Kim TH, Shin YJ, Won AJ, et al. (2013). Resveratrol enhances chemosensitivity of doxorubicin in Multi-drug-resistant human breast cancer cells via increased cellular influx of doxorubicin. Biochim Biophys Acta, S0304-4165(13)00463-7. doi: 10.1016/j.bbagen.2013.10.023.


Ko YC, Chang CL, Chien HF, et al (2011). Resveratrol enhances the expression of death receptor Fas/CD95 and induces differentiation and apoptosis in anaplastic large-cell lymphoma cells. Cancer Lett, 309:46–53


Lu R, Serrero G. (1999). Resveratrol, a natural product derived from grape, exhibits antiestrogenic activity and inhibits the growth of human breast cancer cells. Journal of Cellular Physiology, 179(3):297-304.


Luo H, Wang L, Schulte BA, et al. (2013). Resveratrol enhances ionizing radiation-induced premature senescence in lung cancer cells. Int J Oncol, 43(6):1999-2006. doi: 10.3892/ijo.2013.2141.


Mohan J, Gandhi AA, Bhavya BC, et al. (2006). Caspase-2 triggers Bax-Bak-dependent and – independent cell death in colon cancer cells treated with resveratrol. J Biol Chem, 281:17599–17611


Pozo-Guisado E, Merino JM, Mulero-Navarro S, et al. (2005). Resveratrol-induced apoptosis in MCF-7 human breast cancer cells involves a caspase-independent mechanism with down-regulation of Bcl-2 and NF-kappaB. Int J Cancer, 115:74–84.


Scarlatti F, Maffei R, Beau I, et al (2008). Role of non-canonical Beclin 1-independent autophagy in cell death induced by resveratrol in human breast cancer cells. Cell Death Differ, 8:1318–1329


Shankar S, Siddiqui I, Srivastava RK. (2007). Molecular mechanisms of resveratrol (3,4,5- trihydroxy-trans-stilbene) and its interaction with TNF-related apoptosis inducing ligand (TRAIL) in androgen-insensitive prostate cancer cells. Mol Cell Biochem, 304:273–285


Tang HY, Shih A, Cao HJ, et al. (2006). Resveratrol-induced cyclooxygenase-2 facilitates p53-dependent apoptosis in human breast cancer cells. Mol Cancer Ther, 5:2034–2042


Vang O, Ahmad N, Baile CA, et al. (2011). What is new for an old molecule? Systematic review and recommendations on the use of resveratrol. PLoS ONE, 6:e19881

Puerarin

Cancer: Colon, breast, acute myeloid leukemia

Action: MDR, aromatase inhibition, induces apoptosis

Induces Apoptosis, Colorectal Cancer

Puerarin is isolated from Pueraria radix (Pueraria lobata [(Willd.) Ohwi]) and has beneficial effects on cardiovascular, neurological, and hyperglycemic disorders, as well as anti-cancer properties. Puerariae radix (PR) is a popular natural herb and a traditional food in Asia, which has anti-thrombotic and anti-allergic properties and stimulates estrogenic activity.

Methyl thiazolyl tetrazolium assay (MTT) assay revealed a dose-dependent reduction of HT-29 cellular growth in response to puerarin treatment. Apoptosis was observed following treatments with ³ 25µM puerarin, as reflected by the appearance of the subdiploid fraction and NDA fragmentations. Puerarin also affects the expression of apoptosis-associated genes, revealing an increase of bax and decreases of c-myc and bcl-2.

Finally, puerarin treatment significantly increased the activation of caspase-3, a key executioner of apoptosis. These findings indicate that puerarin may act as a chemo-preventive and/or chemotherapeutic agent in colon cancer cells by reducing cell viability and inducing apoptosis (Li, et al., 2006).

Induces Apoptosis, Breast Cancer

Puerarin exhibits a dose-dependent inhibition of cell growth in HS578T, MDA-MB-231, and MCF-7 cell lines. Results from cell-cycle distribution and apoptosis assays revealed that puerarin induced cell apoptosis through a caspase-3-dependent pathway and mediated cell-cycle arrest in the G2/M phase. It is therefore suggested that puerarin may act as a chemo-preventive and/or chemotherapeutic agent against breast cancer by reducing cell viability and inducing apoptosis (Lin et al., 2009).

Breast Cancer, MDR

Purearin down-regulates MDR1 expression in MCF-7/adriamycin (MCF-7/adr), a human breast MDR cancer cell line. Multi-drug resistance (MDR) is a major obstacle in cancer chemotherapy and its inhibition is an effective way to reverse cancer drug resistance. Puerarin treatment significantly inhibited MDR1 expression, MDR1 mRNA and MDR1 promoter activity in MCF-7/adr cells. The suppression of MDR1 was accompanied by partial recovery of intracellular drug accumulation, leading to increased toxicity of adriamycin and fluorescence of rhodamine 123, indicating that puerarin reversed the MDR phenotype by inhibiting the drug efflux function of MDR1. Puerarin stimulated AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), acetyl-CoA carboxylase and glycogen synthase kinase-3beta phosphorylation, but puerarin decreased cAMP-responsive element-binding protein phosphorylation.

The puerarin-induced suppression of MDR1 expression was reduced by AMPK inhibitor (compound C). Furthermore, both MDR1 protein expression and the transcriptional activity of cAMP-responsive element (CRE) were inhibited by puerarin and protein kinase A/CRE inhibitor (H89). Taken together, these results suggested that puerarin down-regulated MDR1 expression via nuclear factor kappa-B and CRE transcriptional activity-dependent up-regulation of AMPK in MCF-7/adr cells (Hien et al., 2010).

Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML)

The results showed that a certain concentration of puerarin (PR) could inhibit the proliferation of these four cell lines effectively in time-and dose-dependent manners, and the intensity of inhibition on four kinds of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cell lines was from high to low as follows: NB4>Kasumi-1>U937>HL-60. Meanwhile, PR could also change cycle process, cell proportion in G1/G0 phase decreased, cells in S phase increased and Sub-diploid peak also appeared. It is concluded that PR can selectively inhibit the proliferation of four AML cell lines and block cell-cycle process, especially for NB4 cells (Shao et al., 2010).

Aromatase Inhibition

Aromatase P450 (P450 (arom)) is overexpressed in endometriosis, endometrial cancers and uterine fibroids. With weak estrogen agonists/antagonists and some other enzymatic activities, isoflavones are increasingly advocated as a natural alternative to estrogen replacement therapy (ERT) and are available as dietary supplements. Puerarin is a major isoflavonoid compound isolated from Pueraria lobata (ge gen).

Yu et al. (2008) found that puerarin exerted a time-course effect on the inhibition of c-jun mRNA, which parallelled that of P450(arom). The suppression of P450(arom) expression and activity by puerarin treatment may associate with the down-regulation of transcription factor AP-1 or c-jun.

References

Hien TT, Kim HG, Han EH, Kang KW, Jeong HG. (2010). Molecular mechanism of suppression of MDR1 by puerarin from Pueraria lobata via NF- κ B pathway and cAMP-responsive element transcriptional activity-dependent up-regulation of AMP-activated protein kinase in breast cancer MCF-7/adr cells. Mol Nutr Food Res, 54(7):918-28. doi: 10.1002/mnfr.200900146.


Lin YJ, Hou YC, Lin CH, et al. (2009). Puerariae radix isoflavones and their metabolites inhibit growth and induce apoptosis in breast cancer cells. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 378(4):683-8. doi:10.1016/j.bbrc.2008.10.178


Shao HM, Tang YH, Jiang PJ, et al. (2010). Inhibitory effect of flavonoids of puerarin on proliferation of different human acute myeloid leukemia cell lines in vitro. Zhongguo Shi Yan Xue Ye Xue Za Zhi, 18(2):296-9.


Yu C, Li Y, Chen H, Yang S, Xie G. (2008). Decreased expression of aromatase in the Ishikawa and RL95-2 cells by the isoflavone, puerarin, is associated with inhibition of c-jun expression and AP-1 activity. Food Chem Toxicol, 46(12):3671-6. doi: 10.1016/j.fct.2008.09.045.


Yu Z, Li WJ. (2006). Induction of apoptosis by puerarin in colon cancer HT-29 cells. Cancer Letters, 238(1):53-60.

Pheophorbide

Cancer: Liver, lung, uterine sarcoma

Action: MDR

MDR

Pheoborbide is isolated from Scutellaria barbata, a Traditional Chinese Medicine native in southern China, and has been widely used for treating liver diseases.   Pheophorbide a (Pa), an active component from S. barbata, has been shown to have anti-proliferative and Multi-drug-resistant (MDR) effects on the human hepatoma cell line R-HepG2.

Significant reduction of P-glycoprotein expression on Pa-treated R-HepG2 cells was found at both transcriptional and translational levels, leading to reduction of P-glycoprotein activity. In addition, mechanistic study elucidated that Pa induced cell-cycle arrest at G2/M phase and inhibited the expressions of G2/M phase cell-cycle regulatory proteins, cyclin-A1 and cdc2 in a dose-dependent manner (Tang et al., 2007).

Typhonium flagelliforme is an indigenous plant of Malaysia and is used by the local communities to treat cancer. The chemical constituents of Typhonium flagelliforme, particularly those which have anti-proliferative properties towards human cancer cell lines, have been investigated. Purification of the chemical constituents by various chromatographic procedures was guided by the anti-proliferative activity. Four pheophorbide related compounds, namely pheophorbide-a, pheophorbide-a', pyropheophorbide-a and methyl pyropheophorbide-a were identified in the most active fraction, D/F19.

These constituents exhibited anti-proliferative activity against cancer cells and activity increased following photoactivation. However, anti-proliferative activity exhibited by D/F19 alone, relative to the combined effect of pheophorbides and their subfractions, suggests some form of synergistic action between the constituents. The inhibitory effect of D/F19 and the pheophorbides was apoptotic in the absence of light. Most of the chemical constituents identified in this plant have not been reported previously (Lai, Mas, Nair, Mansor, & Navaratnam, 2010).

Prolonged cancer chemotherapy is associated with the development of multi-drug resistance (MDR), which is a major cause of treatment failure. Photodynamic therapy (PDT) has been applied as anti-cancer therapy and a means of circumventing MDR. The anti-proliferative effect of pheophorbide a-mediated photodynamic therapy (Pa-PDT) has been demonstrated in several human cancer cell lines, including the uterine sarcoma cell line, MES-SA.

Combined therapy using Pa-PDT and Dox, a common chemotherapeutic drug, was found to be synergistic in the cell line, MES-SA/Dx5. Both activity and expression of MDR1 and P-gp were reduced by Pa-PDT treatment and such reductions were attenuated by α-tocopherol, the scavenger of reactive oxygen species (ROS), suggesting that the effect of Pa-PDT was mediated by the generation of intracellular ROS (Cheung et al., 2013).

References

Cheung KK, Chan JY, Fung KP. (2013). Anti-proliferative effect of pheophorbide a-mediated photodynamic therapy and its synergistic effect with doxorubicin on multiple drug-resistant uterine sarcoma cell MES-SA/Dx5. Drug Chem Toxicol, 36(4):474-83. doi: 10.3109/01480545.2013.776584.


Lai CS, Mas RH, Nair NK, Mansor SM, Navaratnam V. (2010). Chemical constituents and in vitro anti-cancer activity of Typhonium flagelliforme (Araceae).


Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 127(2), 486-94. doi: 10.1016/j.jep.2009.10.009.


Tang PM, Chan JY, Zhang DM, et al. (2007). Pheophorbide a, an active component in Scutellaria barbata, reverses P-glycoprotein-mediated Multi-drug resistance on a human hepatoma cell line R-HepG2. Cancer Biol Ther, 6(4):504-9.

Paeoniflorin

Cancer: Hepatocellular carcinoma, colorectal, liver

Action: Radio-protective, ameliorated myelosuppression, MDR

Radio-protective

The radio-protective effect of paeoniflorin (PF), a main bioactive component in the traditional Chinese herb peony, on irradiated thymocytes and the possible mechanisms of protection have been investigated. Ionizing radiation can induce DNA damage and cell death by generating reactive oxygen species (ROS).

It was found 60Co γ-ray irradiation increased cell death and DNA fragmentation in a dose-dependent manner while increasing intracellular ROS. Pre-treatment of thymocytes with PF (50–200 µg/ml) reversed this tendency and attenuated irradiation-induced ROS generation. Hydroxyl-scavenging action of PF in vitro was detected through electron spin resonance assay. Several anti-apoptotic characteristics of PF, including the ability to diminish cytosolic Ca2+ concentration, inhibit caspase-3 activation, and up-regulate Bcl-2 and down-regulate Bax in 4 Gy-irradiated thymocytes, were determined.

Extracellular regulated kinase (ERK), c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK), and p38 kinase, were activated by 4 Gy irradiation, with their activation partly blocked by pre-treatment of cells with PF. The presence of ERK inhibitor PD98059, JNK inhibitor SP600125 and p38 inhibitor SB203580 decreased cell death in 4 Gy-irradiated thymocytes. These results suggest PF protects thymocytes against irradiation-induced cell damage by scavenging ROS and attenuating the activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinases (Li et al., 2007).

Liver Cancer

Prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) has been shown to play an important role in tumor development and progression. PGE2 mediates its biological activity by binding any one of four prostanoid receptors (EP1 through EP4). Paeoniflorin, a monoterpene glycoside, significantly inhibited the proliferation of HepG2 and SMMC-7721 cells stimulated by butaprost at multiple time points (24, 48, and 72 hours). Paeoniflorin induced apoptosis in HepG2 and SMMC-7721 cells, which was quantified by annexin-V and propidium iodide staining. Our results indicate that the expression of the EP2 receptor and Bcl-2 was significantly increased, whereas that of Bax and cleaved caspase-3 was decreased in HepG2 and SMMC-7721 cells.

Paeoniflorin, which may be a promising agent in the treatment of liver cancer, induced apoptosis in hepatocellular carcinoma cells by down-regulating EP2 expression and also increased the Bax-to-Bcl-2 ratio, thus up-regulating the activation of caspase-3 (Hu et al., 2013).

Colorectal Cancer

Results showed that positive cells of Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen (PCNA) in paeoniflorin (PF) and docetaxel-treated group was decreased to 30% and 15% respectively, compared with control group of tumors. But apoptosis cells in docetaxel treated groups studied by TUNEL is increased to 40 ± 1.2% and 30 ± 1.5% respectively, compared with 24 ± 2.3% in negative control. Furthermore, the efficiency of tumor-bearing mice treated by PF was superior to docetaxel in vivo. Overall, PF may be an effective chemo-preventive agent against colorectal cancer HT29 (Wang et al., 2012).

Ameliorates Myelosuppression

The administration of paeoniflorin and albiflorin (CPA) extracted from Paeonia radix, significantly ameliorated myelosuppression in all cases. For the X-ray irradiated mice and the chemotherapy treated mice and rabbits, high dosages of CPA resulted in the recovery of, respectively, 94.4%, 95.3% and 97.7% of hemoglobin content; 67.7%, 92.0% and 94.3% of platelet numbers; 26.8%, 137.1% and 107.3% of white blood cell counts; as well as a reversal in the reduction of peripheral differential white blood cell counts.

There was also a recovery of 50.9%, 146.1% and 92.3%, respectively, in the animals' relative spleen weight. Additionally, a recovery of 35.7% and 87.2% respectively in the number of bone marrow nucleated cells was observed in the radio- and chemo -therapy-treated mice. Bone marrow white blood cell counts also resumed to normal levels (Xu et al., 2011).

MDR

Studies have shown that NF-κB activation may play an essential role in the development of chemotherapy resistance in carcinoma cells. Paeonißorin, a principal bioactive component of the root of Paeonia lactißora, has been reported to exhibit various pharmacological effects. In the present study, Fanh et al. (2012) reported for the first time that paeoniflorin at non-toxic concentrations may effectively modulate multi-drug resistance (MDR) of the human gastric cancer cell line SGC7901/vincristine (VCR) via the inhibition of NF-κB activation and, at least partly, by subsequently down-regulating its target genes MDR1, BCL-XL and BCL-2.

References

Fang S, Zhu W, Zhang Y, Shu Y, Liu P. (2012). Paeoniflorin modulates Multi-drug resistance of a human gastric cancer cell line via the inhibition of NF- κB activation. Mol Med Rep, 5(2):351-6. doi: 10.3892/mmr.2011.652.


Hu S, Sun W, Wei W, et al. (2013). Involvement of the prostaglandin E receptor EP2 in paeoniflorin-induced human hepatoma cell apoptosis. Anti-cancer Drugs, 24(2):140-9. doi: 10.1097/CAD.0b013e32835a4dac.


Li CR, Zhou Z, Zhu D, et al. (2007). Protective effect of paeoniflorin on irradiation-induced cell damage involved in modulation of reactive oxygen species and the mitogen-activated protein kinases. The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology, 39(2):426–438


Wang H, Zhou H, Wang CX, et al. (2012). Paeoniflorin inhibits growth of human colorectal carcinoma HT 29 cells in vitro and in vivo. Food Chem Toxicol, 50(5):1560-7. doi: 10.1016/j.fct.2012.01.035.


Xu W, Zhou L, Ma X, et al. (2011). Therapeutic effects of combination of paeoniflorin and albiflorin from Paeonia radix on radiation and chemotherapy-induced myelosuppression in mice and rabbits. Asian Pac J Cancer Prev, 12(8):2031-7.

Guggulsterones

Cancer: Leukemia, cervical cancer

Action: MDR

Guggulsterones are isolated from Commiphora wightii [(Arn.) Bhandari].

Leukemia

The anti-leukemic effects of three isomeric pregnadienedione steroids, cis-guggulsterone, trans-guggulsterone, and 16-dehydroprogesterone, were investigated in HL60 and U937 cells as well as in primary leukemic blasts in culture. Results showed that all three compounds inhibited the proliferation of HL60 and U937 cells, with IC50s ranging from 3.6 to 10.9 µmol/L after treatment for 6 days. These growth-inhibitory effects correlated with externalization of phosphatidylserine and loss of mitochondrial membrane potential., suggesting that these isomeric steroids induce apoptosis in leukemia cells. z-VAD-fmk prevented phosphatidylserine externalization but not mitochondrial membrane potential loss, indicating that mitochondrial dysfunction occurred in the absence of caspase activation.

Interestingly, although all three compounds increased the generation of reactive oxygen species and decreased phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase, only cis-guggulsterone induced a rapid depletion of reduced glutathione levels and oxidation of the mitochondrial phospholipid cardiolipin.

Guggulsterones and 16-dehydroprogesterone hence exert anti-leukemic effects via the induction of apoptosis and differentiation and, more importantly, identifies the pregnadienedione structure as a potential chemotherapeutic scaffold (Samudio et al., 2005).

Multi-drug Resistance

Natural phytosterols, such as beta-sitosterol, campesterol, stigmasterol, fucosterol, and z-guggulsterone, are found in foods, herbs, and dietary supplements. The effects of dietary plant sterols on human drug efflux transporters P-glycoprotein (P-gp, ABCB1) and multi-drug resistance protein 1 (MRP1, ABCC1) were investigated using P-gp-overexpressing human carcinoma KB-C2 cells and human MRP1 gene-transfected KB/MRP cells.

The accumulation of daunorubicin or rhodamine 123, fluorescent substrates of P-gp, increased in the presence of guggulsterone in KB-C2 cells. The efflux of rhodamine 123 from KB-C2 cells was inhibited by guggulsterone. Guggulsterone also increased the accumulation of calcein, a fluorescent substrate of MRP1, in KB/MRP cells. The ATPase activities of P-gp and MRP1 were stimulated by guggulsterone.

These results suggest that guggulsterone, a natural dietary hypolipidemic agent, have dual inhibitory effects on P-gp and MRP1 and the potencies to cause food-drug interactions.

References

Nabekura T, Yamaki T, Ueno K, Kitagawa S. (2008). Effects of plant sterols on human Multi-drug transporters ABCB1 and ABCC1. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 369(2), 363-368. doi: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2008.02.026.


Samudio I, Konopleva M, Safe S, et al. (2005). Guggulsterones induce apoptosis and differentiation in acute myeloid leukemia: identification of isomer-specific antileukemic activities of the pregnadienedione structure. Mol Cancer Ther, 4:1982. doi: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-05-0247.

Dietary Flavones

Cancer:
Prostate, colorectal., breast, pancreatic, bladder, ovarian, leukemia, liver, glioma, osteosarcoma, melanoma

Action: Anti-inflammatory, TAM resistance, cancer stem cells, down-regulate COX-2, apoptosis, cell-cycle arrest, anti-angiogenic, chemo-sensitzer, adramycin (ADM) resistance

Sulforaphane, Phenethyl isothiocyanate (PEITC), quercetin, epicatechin, catechin, Luteolin, apigenin

Anti-inflammatory

The anti-inflammatory activities of celery extracts, some rich in flavone aglycones and others rich in flavone glycosides, were tested on the inflammatory mediators tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α) and nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells (NF-κB) in lipopolysaccharide-stimulated macrophages. Pure flavone aglycones and aglycone-rich extracts effectively reduced TNF-α production and inhibited the transcriptional activity of NF-κB, while glycoside-rich extracts showed no significant effects.

Celery diets with different glycoside or aglycone contents were formulated and absorption was evaluated in mice fed with 5% or 10% celery diets. Relative absorption in vivo was significantly higher in mice fed with aglycone-rich diets as determined by HPLC-MS/MS (where MS/MS is tandem mass spectrometry). These results demonstrate that deglycosylation increases absorption of dietary flavones in vivo and modulates inflammation by reducing TNF-α and NF-κB, suggesting the potential use of functional foods rich in flavones for the treatment and prevention of inflammatory diseases (Hostetler et al., 2012).

Colorectal Cancer

Association between the 6 main classes of flavonoids and the risk of colorectal cancer was examined using data from a national prospective case-control study in Scotland, including 1,456 incident cases and 1,456 population-based controls matched on age, sex, and residence area.

Dietary, including flavonoid, data were obtained from a validated, self-administered food frequency questionnaire. Risk of colorectal cancer was estimated using conditional logistic regression models in the whole sample and stratified by sex, smoking status, and cancer site and adjusted for established and putative risk factors.

The significant dose-dependent reductions in colorectal cancer risk that were associated with increased consumption of the flavonols quercetin, catechin, and epicatechin, remained robust after controlling for overall fruit and vegetable consumption or for other flavonoid intake. The risk reductions were greater among nonsmokers, but no interaction beyond a multiplicative effect was present.

This was the first of several a priori hypotheses to be tested in this large study and showed strong and linear inverse associations of flavonoids with colorectal cancer risk (Theodoratou et al., 2007).

Anti-angiogenic, Prostate Cancer

Luteolin is a common dietary flavonoid found in fruits and vegetables. The anti-angiogenic activity of luteolin was examined using in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo models. Angiogenesis, the formation of new blood vessels from pre-existing vascular beds, is essential for tumor growth, invasion, and metastasis; hence, examination of this mechanism of tumor growth is essential to understanding new chemo-preventive targets. In vitro studies using rat aortic ring assay showed that luteolin at non-toxic concentrations significantly inhibited microvessel sprouting and proliferation, migration, invasion and tube formation of endothelial cells, which are key events in the process of angiogenesis. Luteolin also inhibited ex vivo angiogenesis as revealed by chicken egg chorioallantoic membrane assay (CAM) and matrigel plug assay.

Pro-inflammatory cytokines such as IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, and TNF-α level were significantly reduced by the treatment of luteolin in PC-3 cells. Luteolin (10 mg/kg/d) significantly reduced the volume and the weight of solid tumors in prostate xenograft mouse model, indicating that luteolin inhibited tumorigenesis by targeting angiogenesis. Moreover, luteolin reduced cell viability and induced apoptosis in prostate cancer cells, which were correlated with the down-regulation of AKT, ERK, mTOR, P70S6K, MMP-2, and MMP-9 expressions.

Taken together, these findings demonstrate that luteolin inhibits human prostate tumor growth by suppressing vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2-mediated angiogenesis (Pratheeshkumar et al., 2012).

Pancreatic Cancer; Chemo-sensitizer

The potential of dietary flavonoids apigenin (Api) and luteolin (Lut) were assessed in their ability to enhance the anti-proliferative effects of chemotherapeutic drugs on BxPC-3 human pancreatic cancer cells; additionally, the molecular mechanism of the action was probed.

Simultaneous treatment with either flavonoid (0,13, 25 or 50µM) and chemotherapeutic drugs 5-fluorouracil (5-FU, 50µM) or gemcitabine (Gem, 10µM) for 60 hours resulted in less-than-additive effect (p<0.05). Pre-treatment for 24 hours with 13µM of either Api or Lut, followed by Gem for 36 hours 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, 36h). Lut (15µM, 24h) 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 Api or Lut hence effectively aid in the anti-proliferative activity of chemotherapeutic drugs (Johnson et al., 2013).

Breast Cancer; Chemo-sensitizer, Tamoxifen

The oncogenic molecules in human breast cancer cells are inhibited by luteolin treatment and it was found that the level of cyclin E2 (CCNE2) mRNA was higher in tumor cells than in normal paired tissue samples as assessed using real-time reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis (n=257).

Combined treatment with 4-OH-TAM and luteolin synergistically sensitized the TAM-R cells to 4-OH-TAM. These results 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).

Breast Cancer

Consumers of higher levels of Brassica vegetables, particularly those of the genus Brassica (broccoli, Brussels sprouts and cabbage), reduce their susceptibility to cancer at a variety of organ sites. Brassica vegetables contain high concentrations of glucosinolates that can be hydrolyzed by the plant enzyme, myrosinase, or intestinal microflora to isothiocyanates, potent inducers of cytoprotective enzymes and inhibitors of carcinogenesis. Oral administration of either the isothiocyanate, sulforaphane, or its glucosinolate precursor, glucoraphanin, inhibits mammary carcinogenesis in rats treated with 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene. To determine whether sulforaphane exerts a direct chemo-preventive action on animal and human mammary tissue, the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of a single 150 µmol oral dose of sulforaphane were evaluated in the rat mammary gland.

Sulforaphane metabolites were detected at concentrations known to alter gene expression in cell culture. Elevated cytoprotective NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase (NQO1) and heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) gene transcripts were measured using quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction. An observed 3-fold increase in NQO1 enzymatic activity, as well as 4-fold elevated immunostaining of HO-1 in rat mammary epithelium, provide strong evidence of a pronounced pharmacodynamic action of sulforaphane. In a subsequent pilot study, eight healthy women undergoing reduction mammoplasty were given a single dose of a broccoli sprout preparation containing 200 µmol of sulforaphane. Following oral dosing, sulforaphane metabolites were readily measurable in human breast tissue enriched for epithelial cells. These findings provide a strong rationale for evaluating the protective effects of a broccoli sprout preparation in clinical trials of women at risk for breast cancer (Cornblatt et al., 2007).

In a proof of principle clinical study, the presence of disseminated tumor cells (DTCs) was demonstrated in human breast tissue after a single dose of a broccoli sprout preparation containing 200 µmol of sulforaphane. Together, these studies demonstrate that sulforaphane distributes to the breast epithelial cells in vivo and exerts a pharmacodynamic action in these target cells consistent with its mechanism of chemo-protective efficacy.

Such efficacy, coupled with earlier randomized clinical trials revealing the safety of repeated doses of broccoli sprout preparations , supports further evaluation of broccoli sprouts in the chemoprevention of breast and other cancers (Cornblatt et al., 2007).

CSCs

Recent research into the effects of sulforaphane on cancer stem cells (CSCs) has drawn a great deal of interest. CSCs are suggested to be responsible for initiating and maintaining cancer, and to contribute to recurrence and drug resistance. A number of studies have indicated that sulforaphane may target CSCs in different types of cancer through modulation of NF- κB, SHH, epithelial-mesenchymal transition and Wnt/β-catenin pathways. Combination therapy with sulforaphane and chemotherapy in preclinical settings has shown promising results (Li et al., 2013).

Anti-inflammatory

Sulforaphane has been found to down-regulate COX-2 expression in human bladder transitional cancer T24 cells at both transcriptional- and translational levels. Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) overexpression has been associated with the grade, prognosis and recurrence of transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) of the bladder. Sulforaphane (5-20 microM) induced nuclear translocation of NF-kappaB and reduced its binding to the COX-2 promoter, a key mechanism for suppressing COX-2 expression by sulforaphane. Moreover, sulforaphane increased expression of p38 and phosphorylated-p38 protein. Taken together, these data suggest that p38 is essential in sulforaphane-mediated COX-2 suppression and provide new insights into the molecular mechanisms of sulforaphane in the chemoprevention of bladder cancer (Shan et al., 2009).

Bladder Cancer

An aqueous extract of broccoli sprouts potently inhibits the growth of human bladder carcinoma cells in culture and this inhibition is almost exclusively due to the isothiocyanates. Isothiocyanates are present in broccoli sprouts as their glucosinolate precursors and blocking their conversion to isothiocyanates abolishes the anti-proliferative activity of the extract.

Moreover, the potency of isothiocyanates in the extract in inhibiting cancer cell growth was almost identical to that of synthetic sulforaphane, as judged by their IC50 values (6.6 versus 6.8 micromol/L), suggesting that other isothiocyanates in the extract may be biologically similar to sulforaphane and that nonisothiocyanate substances in the extract may not interfere with the anti-proliferative activity of the isothiocyanates. These data show that broccoli sprout isothiocyanate extract is a highly promising substance for cancer prevention/treatment and that its anti-proliferative activity is exclusively derived from isothiocyanates (Tang et al., 2006).

Ovarian Cancer

Sulforaphane is an extract from the mustard family recognized for its anti-oxidation abilities, phase 2 enzyme induction, and anti-tumor activity. The cell-cycle arrest in G2/M by sulforaphane and the expression of cyclin B1, Cdc2, and the cyclin B1/CDC2 complex in PA-1 cells using Western blotting and co-IP Western blotting. The anti-cancer effects of dietary isothiocyanate sulforaphane on ovarian cancer were investigated using cancer cells line PA-1.

Sulforaphane -treated cells accumulated in metaphase by CDC2 down-regulation and dissociation of the cyclin B1/CDC2 complex.

These findings suggest that, in addition to the known effects on cancer prevention, sulforaphane may also provide anti-tumor activity in established ovarian cancer (Chang et al., 2013).

Leukemia Stem Cells

Isolated leukemia stem cells (LSCs) showed high expression of Oct4, CD133, β-catenin, and Sox2 and imatinib (IM) resistance. Differentially, CD34(+)/CD38(-) LSCs demonstrated higher BCR-ABL and β-catenin expression and IM resistance than CD34(+)/CD38(+) counterparts. IM and sulforaphane (SFN) combined treatment sensitized CD34(+)/CD38(-) LSCs and induced apoptosis, shown by increased caspase 3, PARP, and Bax while decreased Bcl-2 expression. Mechanistically, imatinib (IM) and sulforaphane (SFN) combined treatment resensitized LSCs by inducing intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS). Importantly, β-catenin-silenced LSCs exhibited reduced glutathione S-transferase pi 1 (GSTP1) expression and intracellular GSH level, which led to increased sensitivity toward IM and sulforaphane.

It was hence demonstrated that IM and sulforaphane combined treatment effectively eliminated CD34(+)/CD38(-) LSCs. Since SFN has been shown to be well tolerated in both animals and human, this regimen could be considered for clinical trials (Lin et al., 2012).

DCIS Stem Cells

A miR-140/ALDH1/SOX9 axis has been found to be critical to basal cancer stem cell self-renewal and tumor formation in vivo, suggesting that the miR-140 pathway may be a promising target for preventive strategies in patients with basal-like Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS). The dietary compound sulforaphane has been found to decrease Transcription factor SOX-9 and Acetaldehyde dehydrogenases (ALDH1), and thereby reduced tumor growth in vivo (Li et al., 2013).

Glioma, Prostate Cancer, Colon Cancer, Breast Cancer, Liver Cancer

Phenethyl isothiocyanate (PEITC), a natural dietary isothiocyanate, inhibits angiogenesis. The effects of PEITC were examined under hypoxic conditions on the intracellular level of the hypoxia inducible factor (HIF-1α) and extracellular level of the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in a variety of human cancer cell lines. Gupta et al., (2013) observed that PEITC suppressed the HIF-1α accumulation during hypoxia in human glioma U87, human prostate cancer DU145, colon cancer HCT116, liver cancer HepG2, and breast cancer SkBr3 cells. PEITC treatment also significantly reduced the hypoxia-induced secretion of VEGF.

Suppression of HIF-1α accumulation during treatment with PEITC in hypoxia was related to PI3K and MAPK pathways.

Taken together, these results suggest that PEITC inhibits the HIF-1α expression through inhibiting the PI3K and MAPK signaling pathway and provide a new insight into a potential mechanism of the anti-cancer properties of PEITC.

Breast Cancer Metastasis

Breast tumor metastasis is a leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide. Breast tumor cells frequently metastasize to brain and initiate severe therapeutic complications. The chances of brain metastasis are further elevated in patients with HER2 overexpression. The MDA-MB-231-BR (BR-brain seeking) breast tumor cells stably transfected with luciferase were injected into the left ventricle of mouse heart and the migration of cells to brain was monitored using a non-invasive IVIS bio-luminescent imaging system.

Results demonstrate that the growth of metastatic brain tumors in PEITC treated mice was about 50% less than that of control. According to Kaplan Meir's curve, median survival of tumor-bearing mice treated with PEITC was prolonged by 20.5%. Furthermore, as compared to controls, we observed reduced HER2, EGFR and VEGF expression in the brain sections of PEITC treated mice. These results demonstrate the anti-metastatic effects of PEITC in vivo in a novel breast tumor metastasis model and provides the rationale for further clinical investigation (Gupta et al., 2013).

Osteosarcoma, Melanoma

Phenethyl isothiocyanate (PEITC) has been found to induce apoptosis in human osteosarcoma U-2 OS cells. The following end points were determined in regard to human malignant melanoma cancer A375.S2 cells: cell morphological changes, cell-cycle arrest, DNA damage and fragmentation assays and morphological assessment of nuclear change, reactive oxygen species (ROS) and Ca2+ generations, mitochondrial membrane potential disruption, and nitric oxide and 10-N-nonyl acridine orange productions, expression and activation of caspase-3 and -9, B-cell lymphoma 2 (Bcl-2)-associated X protein (Bax), Bcl-2, poly (adenosine diphosphate-ribose) polymerase, and cytochrome c release, apoptosis-inducing factor and endonuclease G. PEITC

It was therefore concluded that PEITC-triggered apoptotic death in A375.S2 cells occurs through ROS-mediated mitochondria-dependent pathways (Huang et al., 2013).

Prostate Cancer

The glucosinolate-derived phenethyl isothiocyanate (PEITC) has recently been demonstrated to reduce the risk of prostate cancer (PCa) and inhibit PCa cell growth. It has been shown that p300/CBP-associated factor (PCAF), a co-regulator for the androgen receptor (AR), is upregulated in PCa cells through suppression of the mir-17 gene. Using AR-responsive LNCaP cells, the inhibitory effects of PEITC were observed on the dihydrotestosterone-stimulated AR transcriptional activity and cell growth of PCa cells.

Expression of PCAF was upregulated in PCa cells through suppression of miR-17. PEITC treatment significantly decreased PCAF expression and promoted transcription of miR-17 in LNCaP cells. Functional inhibition of miR-17 attenuated the suppression of PCAF in cells treated by PEITC. Results indicate that PEITC inhibits AR-regulated transcriptional activity and cell growth of PCa cells through miR-17-mediated suppression of PCAF, suggesting a new mechanism by which PEITC modulates PCa cell growth (Yu et al., 2013).

Bladder Cancer; Adramycin (ADM) Resistance

The role of PEITC on ADM resistance reversal of human bladder carcinoma T24/ADM cells has been examined, including an increased drug sensitivity to ADM, cell apoptosis rates, intracellular accumulation of Rhodamine-123 (Rh-123), an increased expression of DNA topoisomerase II (Topo-II), and a decreased expression of multi-drug resistance gene (MDR1), multi-drug resistance-associated protein (MRP1), bcl-2 and glutathione s transferase π (GST-π). The results indicated that PEITC might be used as a potential therapeutic strategy to ADM resistance through blocking Akt and activating MAPK pathway in human bladder carcinoma (Tang et al., 2013).

Breast Cancer; Chemo-enhancing

The synergistic effect between paclitaxel (taxol) and phenethyl isothiocyanate (PEITC) on the inhibition of breast cancer cells has been examined. Two drug-resistant breast cancer cell lines, MCF7 and MDA-MB-231, were treated with PEITC and taxol. Cell growth, cell-cycle, and apoptosis were examined.

The combination of PEITC and taxol significantly decreased the IC50 of PEITC and taxol over each agent alone. The combination also increased apoptosis by more than 2-fold over each single agent in both cell lines. A significant increase of cells in the G2/M phases was detected. Taken together, these results indicated that the combination of PEITC and taxol exhibits a synergistic effect on growth inhibition in breast cancer cells. This combination deserves further study in vivo (Liu et al., 2013).

References

Chang CC, Hung CM, Yang YR, Lee MJ, Hsu YC. (2013). Sulforaphane induced cell-cycle arrest in the G2/M phase via the blockade of cyclin B1/CDC2 in human ovarian cancer cells. J Ovarian Res, 6(1):41. doi: 10.1186/1757-2215-6-41


Cornblatt BS, Ye LX, Dinkova-Kostova AT, et al. (2007). Preclinical and clinical evaluation of sulforaphane for chemoprevention in the breast. Carcinogenesis, 28(7):1485-1490. doi: 10.1093/carcin/bgm049


Gupta B, Chiang L, Chae K, Lee DH. (2013). Phenethyl isothiocyanate inhibits hypoxia-induced accumulation of HIF-1 α and VEGF expression in human glioma cells. Food Chem, 141(3):1841-6. doi: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2013.05.006.


Gupta P, Adkins C, Lockman P, Srivastava SK. (2013). Metastasis of Breast Tumor Cells to Brain Is Suppressed by Phenethyl Isothiocyanate in a Novel In Vivo Metastasis Model. PLoS One, 8(6):e67278. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0067278


Hostetler G, Riedl K, Cardenas H, et al. (2012). Flavone deglycosylation increases their anti-inflammatory activity and absorption. Molecular Nutrition & Food Research, 56(4):558-569. doi: 10.1002/mnfr.201100596


Huang SH, Hsu MH, Hsu SC, et al. (2013). Phenethyl isothiocyanate triggers apoptosis in human malignant melanoma A375.S2 cells through reactive oxygen species and the mitochondria-dependent pathways. Hum Exp Toxicol. doi: 10.1177/0960327113491508


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, 60:83-91. doi: 10.1016/j.fct.2013.07.036.


Li Q, Yao Y, Eades G, Liu Z, Zhang Y, Zhou Q. (2013). Down-regulation of miR-140 promotes cancer stem cell formation in basal-like early stage breast cancer. Oncogene. doi: 10.1038/onc.2013.226.


Li Y, Zhang T. (2013). Targeting cancer stem cells with sulforaphane, a dietary component from broccoli and broccoli sprouts. Future Oncol, 9(8):1097-103. doi: 10.2217/fon.13.108.


Lin LC, Yeh CT, Kuo CC, et al. (2012). Sulforaphane potentiates the efficacy of imatinib against chronic leukemia cancer stem cells through enhanced abrogation of Wnt/ β-catenin function. J Agric Food Chem, 60(28):7031-9. doi: 10.1021/jf301981n.


Liu K, Cang S, Ma Y, Chiao JW. (2013). Synergistic effect of paclitaxel and epigenetic agent phenethyl isothiocyanate on growth inhibition, cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis in breast cancer cells. Cancer Cell Int, 13(1):10. doi: 10.1186/1475-2867-13-10.


Pratheeshkumar P, Son YO, Budhraja A, et al. (2012). Luteolin inhibits human prostate tumor growth by suppressing vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2-mediated angiogenesis. PLoS One, 7(12):52279. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0052279.


Tang K, Lin Y, Li LM. (2013). The role of phenethyl isothiocyanate on bladder cancer ADM resistance reversal and its molecular mechanism. Anat Rec (Hoboken), 296(6):899-906. doi: 10.1002/ar.22677.


Tang L, Zhang Y, Jobson HE, et al. (2006). Potent activation of mitochondria-mediated apoptosis and arrest in S and M phases of cancer cells by a broccoli sprout extract. Mol Cancer Ther, 5(4):935-44. doi: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-05-0476


Theodoratou E, Kyle J, Cetnarskyj R, et al. (2007). Dietary flavonoids and the risk of colorectal cancer. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev,16(4):684-93.


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.


Shan Y, Wu K, Wang W, et al. (2009). Sulforaphane down-regulates COX-2 expression by activating p38 and inhibiting NF-kappaB-DNA-binding activity in human bladder T24 cells. Int J Oncol, 34(4):1129-34.


Yu C, Gong AY, Chen D, et al. (2013). Phenethyl isothiocyanate inhibits androgen receptor-regulated transcriptional activity in prostate cancer cells through suppressing PCAF. Mol Nutr Food Res. doi: 10.1002/mnfr.201200810.

Artesunate

Cancer: Colon, esophageal., pancreatic, ovarian, multiple myeloma and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, osteosarcoma, lung, breast, skin, leukemia/lymphoma

Action: Anti-metastatic, MDR, radio-sensitizer

Pulmonary Adenocarcinomas

Artesunate exerts anti-proliferative effects in pulmonary adenocarcinomas. It mediates these anti-neoplastic effects by virtue of activating Bak (Zhou et al., 2012). At the same time, it down-regulates epidermal growth factor receptor expression. This results in augmented non-caspase dependent apoptosis in the adenocarcinoma cells. Artesunate mediated apoptosis is time as well as dose-dependent. Interestingly, AIF and Bim play significant roles in this Bak-dependent accentuated apoptosis (Ma et al., 2011). Adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-binding cassette subfamily G member 2 (ABCG2) expression is also attenuated while transcription of matrix metallopeptidase 7 (MMP-7) is also down-regulated (Zhao et al., 2011). In addition, arsenuate enhances the radio-sensitization of lung carcinoma cells. It mediates this effect by down-regulating cyclin B1 expression, resulting in augmented G2/M phase arrest (Rasheed et al., 2010).

Breast Cancer

Similarly, artesunate exhibits anti-neoplastic effects in breast carcinomas. Artesunate administration is typically accompanied by attenuated turnover as well as accentuated peri-nuclear localization of autophagosomes in the breast carcinoma cells. Mitochondrial outer membrane permeability is typically augmented. As a result, artesunate augments programmed cellular decline in breast carcinoma cells (Hamacher-Brady et al., 2011).

Skin Cancer

Artesunate also exerts anti-neoplastic effects in skin malignancies. It mediates these effects by up-regulating p21. At the same time it down-regulates cyclin D1 (Jiang et al., 2012).

Colon Cancer

Artemisunate significantly inhibited both the invasiveness and anchorage independence of colon cancer SW620 cells in a dose-dependent manner. The protein level of intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) was down-regulated as relative to the control group.

Artemisunate could potentially inhibit invasion of the colon carcinoma cell line SW620 by down-regulating ICAM-1 expression (Fan, Zhang, Yao & Li, 2008).

Multi-drug resistance; Colon Cancer

A profound cytotoxic action of the antimalarial., artesunate (ART), was identified against 55 cancer cell lines of the U.S. National Cancer Institute (NCI). The 50% inhibition concentrations (IC50 values) for ART correlated significantly to the cell doubling times (P = 0.00132) and the portion of cells in the G0/G1 (P = 0.02244) or S cell-cycle phases (P = 0.03567).

Efferth et al., (2003) selected mRNA expression data of 465 genes obtained by microarray hybridization from the NCI data-base. These genes belong to different biological categories (drug resistance genes, DNA damage response and repair genes, oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes, apoptosis-regulating genes, proliferation-associated genes, and cytokines and cytokine-associated genes). The constitutive expression of 54 of 465 (=12%) genes correlated significantly to the IC50 values for ART. Hierarchical cluster analysis of these 12 genes allowed the differentiation of clusters with ART-sensitive or ART-resistant cell lines (P = 0.00017).

Multi-drug-resistant cells differentially expressing the MDR1, MRP1, or BCRP genes were not cross-resistant to ART. ART acts via p53-dependent and- independent pathways in isogenic p53+/+ p21WAF1/CIP1+/+, p53-/- p21WAF1/CIP1+/+, and p53+/+ p21WAF1/CIP1-/- colon carcinoma cells.

Multi-drug resistance; Esophageal Cancer

The present study aimed to investigate the correlation between ABCG2 expression and the MDR of esophageal cancer and to estimate the therapeutic benefit of down-regulating ABCG2 expression and reversing chemoresistance in esophageal cells using artesunate (ART).

ART is a noteworthy antimalarial agent, particularly in severe and drug-resistant cancer cases, as ART is able to reverse drug resistance. ART exerted profound anti-cancer activity. The mechanism for the reversal of multi-drug resistance by ART in esophageal carcinoma was analyzed using cellular experiments, but still remains largely unknown (Liu, Zuo, & Guo, 2013).

Pancreatic Cancer

The combination of triptolide and artesunate could inhibit pancreatic cancer cell line growth, and induce apoptosis, accompanied by expression of HSP 20 and HSP 27, indicating important roles in the synergic effects. Moreover, tumor growth was decreased with triptolide and artesunate synergy. Results indicated that triptolide and artesunate in combination at low concentrations can exert synergistic anti-tumor effects in pancreatic cancer cells with potential clinical applications (Liu & Cui, 2013).

Ovarian Cancer

Advanced-stage ovarian cancer (OVCA) has a unifocal origin in the pelvis. Molecular pathways associated with extrapelvic OVCA spread are also associated with metastasis from other human cancers and with overall patient survival. Such pathways represent appealing therapeutic targets for patients with metastatic disease.

Pelvic and extrapelvic OVCA implants demonstrated similar patterns of signaling pathway expression and identical p53 mutations.

However, Marchion et al. (2013) identified 3 molecular pathways/cellular processes that were differentially expressed between pelvic and extrapelvic OVCA samples and between primary/early-stage and metastatic/advanced or recurrent ovarian, oral., and prostate cancers. Furthermore, their expression was associated with overall survival from ovarian cancer (P = .006), colon cancer (1 pathway at P = .005), and leukemia (P = .05). Artesunate-induced TGF-WNT pathway inhibition impaired OVCA cell migration.

Multiple Myeloma, B-cell Lymphoma

Findings indicate that artesunate is a potential drug for treatment of multiple myeloma and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) at doses of the same order as currently in use for treatment of malaria without serious adverse effects. Artesunate treatment efficiently inhibited cell growth and induced apoptosis in cell lines. Apoptosis was induced concomitantly with down-regulation of MYC and anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 family proteins, as well as with cleavage of caspase-3. The IC50 values of artesunate in cell lines varied between 0.3 and 16.6 µm. Furthermore, some primary myeloma cells were also sensitive to artesunate at doses around 10 µm. Concentrations of this order are pharmacologically relevant as they can be obtained in plasma after intravenous administration of artesunate for malaria treatment (Holien et al., 2013).

Osteosarcoma, Leukemia/Lymphoma

Artesunate inhibits growth and induces apoptosis in human osteosarcoma HOS cell line in vitro and in vivo (Xu et al. 2011). ART alone or combined with chemotherapy drugs could inhibit the proliferation of B/T lymphocytic tumor cell lines as well ALL primary cells in vitro, probably through the mechanism of apoptosis, which suggest that ART is likely to be a potential drug in the treatment of leukemia/lymphoma (Zeng et al., 2009).

References

Efferth, T., Sauerbrey, A., Olbrich, A., et al. (2003) Molecular modes of action of artesunate in tumor cell lines. Mol Pharmacol, 64(2):382-94.


Fan, Y., Zhang, Y.L., Yao, G.T., & Li, Y.K. (2008). Inhibition of Artemisunate on the invasion of human colon cancer line SW620. Lishizzhen Medicine and Materia Medica Research, 19(7), 1740-1741.


Hamacher-Brady, A., Stein, H.A., Turschner, S., et al. (2011). Artesunate activates mitochondrial apoptosis in breast cancer cells via iron-catalyzed lysosomal reactive oxygen species production. J Biol Chem. 2011;286(8):6587–6601. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M110.210047.


Holien, T., Olsen, O.E., Misund, K., et al. (2013). Lymphoma and myeloma cells are highly sensitive to growth arrest and apoptosis induced by artesunate. Eur J Haematol, 91(4):339-46. doi: 10.1111/ejh.12176.


Jiang, Z., Chai, J., Chuang, H.H., et al. (2012). Artesunate induces G0/G1 cell-cycle arrest and iron-mediated mitochondrial apoptosis in A431 human epidermoid carcinoma cells. Anti-cancer Drugs, 23(6):606–613. doi: 10.1097/CAD.0b013e328350e8ac.


Liu, L., Zuo, L.F., Guo, J.W. (2013). Reversal of Multi-drug resistance by the anti-malaria drug artesunate in the esophageal cancer Eca109/ABCG2 cell line. Oncol Lett, 6(5):1475-1481.


Liu, Y. & Cui, Y.F. (2013). Synergism of cytotoxicity effects of triptolide and artesunate combination treatment in pancreatic cancer cell lines. Asian Pac J Cancer Prev, 14(9):5243-8.


Ma, H., Yaom Q., Zhang, A.M., et al. (2011). The effects of artesunate on the expression of EGFR and ABCG2 in A549 human lung cancer cells and a xenograft model. Molecules, 16(12):10556–10569. doi: 10.3390/molecules161210556.


Marchion, D.C., Xiong, Y., Chon, H.S., et al. (2013). Gene expression data reveal common pathways that characterize the unifocal nature of ovarian cancer. Am J Obstet Gynecol, S0002-9378(13)00827-2. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2013.08.004.


Rasheed, S.A., Efferth, T., Asangani, I.A., Allgayer, H. (2010). First evidence that the antimalarial drug artesunate inhibits invasion and in vivo metastasis in lung cancer by targeting essential extracellular proteases. Int J Cancer, 127(6):1475–1485. doi: 10.1002/ijc.25315.


Xu, Q., Li, Z.X., Peng, H.Q., et al. (2011). Artesunate inhibits growth and induces apoptosis in human osteosarcoma HOS cell line in vitro and in vivo. J Zhejiang Univ-Sci B (Biomed & Biotechnol), 12(4):247–255. doi: 10.1631/jzus.B1000373.


Zhao, Y., Jiang, W., Li, B., et al. (2011). Artesunate enhances radiosensitivity of human non-small-cell lung cancer A549 cells via increasing no production to induce cell-cycle arrest at G2/M phase. Int Immunopharmacol, 11(12):2039–2046. doi: 10.1016/j.intimp.2011.08.017.


Zeng, Y., Ni, X., Meng, W.T., Wen, Q., Jia, Y.Q. (2009). Inhibitive effect of artesunate on human lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma cells. Sichuan Da Xue Xue Bao Yi Xue Ban, 40(6):1038-43.


Zhou, C., Pan, W., Wang, X.P., Chen, T.S. (2012). Artesunate induces apoptosis via a bak-mediated caspase-independent intrinsic pathway in human lung adenocarcinoma cells. J Cell Physiol, 227(12):3778–3786. doi: 10.1002/jcp.24086.

Multi-drug resistance

Multi-drug resistance in cancer chemotherapy refers to the ability of cancer cells to survive from treatment of a wide range of drugs (Meszaros et al., 2009).

In addition to the MDR induced by drugs in early exposure, the MDR cancer cells may subsequently develop cross-resistance to several unexposed and structurally unrelated chemotherapeutic agents (Biedler et al., 1970).

How to tackle the MDR cells in chemotherapy is a pressing issue in cancer treatments. Verapamil was the first known Pgp inhibitor to increase the intracellular concentration of anti-cancer agents in MDR cells by binding to Pgp and inhibiting the Pgp-mediated efflux (Twentyman, 1992). It was believed that anti-cancer drug resistance could be reversed by drug efflux inhibition. Researchers developed and tested a range of Pgp inhibitors to improve the pharmacological effects of chemotherapy in cancer patients (Tsuruo et al., 1981; Stewart et al., 2000; Toppmeyer et al., 2002).

Mechanisms of MDR include decreased uptake of drugs, alterations in cellular pathways and increased active efflux of drugs (Gottesman, 2002; La Porta, 2007; Watson, 1991).

Overexpression of ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters is one of the most common mechanisms. Overexpression of the three major ABC transporters, i.e. P-glycoprotein (Pgp), multi-drug resistance-associated protein 1 (MRP1) and breast cancer resistance protein (BCRP/ABCG2), is frequently observed in cancer cell lines selected with chemotherapeutic drugs (Szakacs et al., 2006) and critical to clinical drug resistance (Leonard, 2003).

Fractions from 17 clinically used anti-tumor traditional Chinese medicinal herbs were tested for their potential to restore the sensitivity of MCF-7/ADR and A549/Taxol cells to a known anti-neoplastic agent. Five herbs, Curcuma wenyujin, Chrysanthemum indicum, Salvia chinensis, Ligusticum chuanxiong Hort. and Cassia tora L., could sensitize these resistant cancer cells at a non-toxic concentration (10  µg mL–1), and markedly increased doxorubicin accumulation in MCF-7/ADR cells, which necessitates further investigations into the active ingredients of these herbs and their underlying mechanisms (Yang et al., 2011).

Natural sources are a fertile ground to find novel drugs with activity against MDR cancer cells. In some countries, especially China, traditional herbal medicines are often used together with mainstream chemotherapeutic agents. The clinically used traditional Chinese herbs for the treatment of tumor can be classified into four categories based on the theory of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM): drugs (CH group) for 'Clearing away Heat and Toxins', drugs (PB group) for 'Promoting Blood Flow to Remove Stasis', drugs for 'Invigoration' and toxic drugs. Drugs for 'Invigoration' have indirect anti-neoplastic action by enhancing an organism's immunity and have been used clinically to minimise radiotherapy- and chemotherapy-induced toxicity (Fu & Chen, 2008; Chai, To, Lin, 2010).

Some of the recent findings on the circumvention of ABC transporters-mediated MDR by various ingredients and extracts of CM and their formulae, based on whether the MDR reversal involved Pgp alteration, are reviewed below.

Saponins

Ginsenosides are the major active components from Panax ginseng (Renshen). Ginsenosides are mainly triterpenoid dammarane derivatives. Several ginsenosides, namely Rg1, Rg3, Re, Rc and Rd inhibited drug efflux (Kim et al., 2003). A combination of purified saponins containing Rb1, Rb2, Rc, Rd, Re and Rg1 reversed MDR whereas individual ginsenosides did not produce any effect (Park et al., 2006). Ginsenosides reversed MDR of several chemotherapeutic drugs such as homoharringtonine, cytarabine, doxorubicin and etoposide in K562/VCR and in a dose-dependent manner in K562/DOX (Gao et al., 2004).

Pgp expression decreased but bcl-2 expression remained the same (Wang, 2003). Rb1 reversed MDR of harringtonolide and vincristine in K562/HHT and HL60/VCR cell lines respectively (Shi et al. , 2005).

Panax notoginseng (Sanqi) total saponins reversed MDR of doxorubicin in MCF-7/DOX and K562/VCR cell lines. The mechanism may be related to the decrease of Pgp expression (Si & Tien, 2005; Liu, Liu, & Fang, 2008).

Rg3, one of the active ginsenosides from Panax ginseng, restored the sensitivity of resistant KBV20 cell line to various anti-cancer drugs, including vincristine, doxorubicin, etoposide and colchicine in a time-and dose-dependent manner. This ginsenoside competitively inhibited the binding of substrate drugs to Pgp and its binding affinity to Pgp was remarkably higher than that of verapamil. In contrast to the dose-dependent effects in vitro, Rg3 increased animal life span in an in vivo MDR model in a dose-independent manner (Kim et al., 2003).

Flavonoids

Quercetin is one of the most widely distributed flavonoids in natural products including Chinese medicinal herbs such as Sophora japonica (Huai). Quercetin inhibited the binding of heat shock factor at the MDR1 promoter, thereby decreasing MDR1 transcription and reducing Pgp expression (Kim et al., 1998). Quercetin also inhibited the overexpression of Pgp mediated by arsenite (Kioka et al., 1992). In HL-60/DOX and K562/DOX cell lines, quercetin enhanced the anti-cancer sensitivity to daunorubicin and decreased Pgp expression (Cai et al., 2004; Cai et al., 2005). MDR reversal effect of quercetin was probably mediated by its action on mitochondrial membrane potential and the induction of apoptosis. Furthermore, quercetin derivatives rather than quercetin itself reversed MDR (Kothan et al., 2004). Quercetin increased the sensitivity of Pgp-overexpressing KBV1 cell line towards vinblastine and paclitaxel in a dose-dependent manner. Among many active flavonoids, quercetin was less potent than kaempferol but more effective than genistein and daidzein in reversing MDR. Genistein and daidzein had no effect on Pgp expression (Limtrakul, Khantamat, & Pintha, 2005).

Although quercetin may be a potential MDR reversing agent, lethal drug-drug interaction between quercetin and digoxin has been reported. Quercetin (40 mg/kg) elevated the peak blood concentration of digoxin and caused sudden death of tested animals (Wang et al., 2004).

Paeonol is a weak calcium channel blocker isolated from the root of Paeonia suffruticosa (Mudan). In K562/DOX cell line, paeonol showed positive MDR reversal effect towards doxorubicin, daunorubicin, vincristine and vinblastine without modulating Pgp expression [100]. In parental K562 cells, paeonol induced apoptosis in a time-and dose-dependent manner (Sun et al., 2004).

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 & Amiji, 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 (Um et al., 2008). 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 (Um et al., 2008). Bisdemethoxycurcumin modified from curcumin resulted in greater inhibition of Pgp expression (Limtrakul, Anuchapreeda, & Buddhasukh, 2004). Tetrahydrocurcumin, the major metabolite of curcumin, inhibited all three major ABC transporters (Limtrakul et al., 2007). Curcumin induced atypical and caspase-independent cell death in MDR cells (Piwocka, Bielak-Mijewska, & Sikora, 2002). In leukaemic cells collected from 78 childhood leukaemia patients, curcumin reduced Pgp expression (Anuchapreeda et al., 2006). A specialized nanoemulsion of curcumin is better than conventional solution form drugs in enhancing the efficiency of drug delivery into the cells, down-regulating Pgp expression, inhibiting the NFκB pathway and promoting apoptotic response (Choi et al., 2008).

Other Compounds

Schizandrins, the active constituents of Schisandra chinensis (Wuweizi), were investigated for their MDR reversal effects. Schizandrin A was the most potent in reversing MDR by enhancing apoptosis and down-regulating Pgp and total protein kinase C expression. The crude extract of Schisandra chinensis reversed the resistance against vincristine in vivo (Huang et al., 2008). Deoxyschizandrin and γ-schizandrin, among the nine dibenzo[a,c]cyclooctadiene lignans examined, enhanced intracellular drug concentration and induced cell-cycle arrest at the G2/M phase when combined with sub-toxic dosages of doxorubicin (Slaninová et al., 2009). Gomisin A, on the other hand, altered Pgp-substrate interaction by binding to Pgp simultaneously with substrates (Wan et al., 2006).

Formulae – injections (See Injectables)

'Shengmai Injection', consisting of Panax ginseng and Ophiopogon japonicus (Maidong), down-regulated Pgp expression in peripheral blood lymphocyte membrane. When used together with oxaliplatin, 5-fluorouracil or folinic acid, the injection prolonged the survival rate of colon cancer patients (Cao et al., 2005). The injection also enhanced the efficacy of tamoxifen and nifedipine in combination therapy (Lin et al., 2002).

'KLT Injection' consisting of the extract of Coix lacryma-jobi (Yiyi) enhanced the anti-cancer activities of paclitaxel and docetaxel and reversed MDR in a dose-dependent manner (Dong, Zheng, & Lu, 2002).

Formulae – powders

'Shenghe Powder', consisting of Panax ginseng, Scorophularia ningpoensis (Xuanshen) and Atractylodes macrocephala (Baizhu), increased the intracellular concentration of vincristine in resistant SGC-7901/VCR cell line, possibly due to the induction of apoptosis and down-regulation of Pgp and bcl-2 expression (Wang et al., 2007).

'Modified Sanwubai Powder', consisting of herbs such as Croton tiglium (Badou), Platycodon grandiflorum (Jiegeng) and Fritillaria thunbergii, induced apoptosis in SGC-7901 cell line and down-regulated the gene expressions of p53, bcl-2, rasP21CD44 and Pgp (Xu et al., 2005).

Formulae – others

Three herbal extracts used to treat diseases other than cancer, namely Ams-11, Fw-13 and Tul-17, greatly enhanced the efficacy of vincristine both in vitro and in vivo and reversed MDR in a dose-dependent manner. Tul-17 inhibited Pgp expression (Qu et al., 2006).

Oil emulsion from Brucea javanica (Yadanzi) reversed MDR when used together with other chemotherapeutic drugs such as vincristine, doxorubicin, cisplatin, mitomycin C, 5-fluorouracil or etoposide, probably due to down-regulation of Pgp expression or inhibition of TOPO II or both (Yu, Wu, Zhang, 2001).

'Sangeng Mixture Decoction', consisting of Reynoutria japonica (Huzhang), Actinidia arguta (Mihouligen) and Geum aleppicum (Shuiyangmeigen), reversed MDR of doxorubicin via down-regulation of Pgp expression (Feng et al., 2003).

FFTLG, a formula containing Actinidia arguta, reversed MDR in K562/DOX cell line by increasing the intracellular doxorubicin concentration (Guo, Xie, Feng, 2002).

R1, consisting of Ligusticum chuanxiong, Curcuma longa and Millettia dielsiana (Jixueteng), enhanced the anti-cancer activities of doxorubicin in MCF-7/DOX via down-regulation of Pgp expression (Chen et al., 2003; Lin, 2007).

Formulae

'Ganli Injection', consisting of matrine and tetramethylpyazine hydrochloride, reversed MDR by increasing the sensitivity of 5-fluorouracil and the intracellular concentration of doxorubicin in BEL-7402/5-FU cell line (Gu et al., 2007).

'Bushen Huayu Jiedu Formula', consisting of Cinnamomum cassia (Rougui), Psoralea corylifolia (Buguzhi) and Rheum palmatum, was tested in A549/DDP cell line and S180 tumor-bearing mice. In vitro, the formula significantly increased the intracellular concentration of cisplatin at high doses and inhibited the activity of calcium channel and LRP-56 expression at both high and low doses. In vivo, the formula improved the serum concentration, reduced the inflow and the release of Ca2+ and inhibited the LRP gene expression (Cao et al., 2004; Cao et al., 2008).

Four CM formulae, namely Glycyrrhiza glabra (GLYC), Hedyotis diffusa (OLEN), a formula consisting of 15 herbs including Cistanche deserticola (Roucongrong), Rabdosia rubescens (Donglingcao) and Zanthoxylum nitidum (Liangmianzhen) (SPES), and a formula consisting of eight herbs including Serenoa repens (Juyezhong), Scutellaria baicalensis (Huangqin), Panax ginseng and Glycyrrhiza glabra (PC-SPES) were cytotoxic to cancer cell lines in a dose-dependent manner. SPES, PC-SPES, OLEN decreased the bcl-2 gene expression and were pro-apoptotic, while GLYC was pro-necrotic without altering the over-expression of bcl-2 in MDR cells. Furthermore, OLEN, SPES and PC-SPES exhibited similar pharmacological effects to etoposide and vincristine (Sadava et al., 2002).

References

Anuchapreeda S, Thanarattanakorn P, Sittipreechacharn S, et al. (2006). Inhibitory effect of curcumin on MDR1 gene expression in patient leukemic cells. Arch Pharm Res, 29(10):866-873

Biedler JL, Riehm H. (1970). Cellular resistance to actinomycin D in Chinese hamster cells in vitro: cross-resistance, radioautographic, and cytogenetic studies. Cancer Res, 30:1174-1184.

Cai X, Chen FY, Han JY, et al. (2004). Restorative effect of quercetin on subcellular distribution of daunorubicin in Multi-drug-resistant leukemia cell lines K562/ADM and HL-60/ADM. Chin J Cancer, 23(12):1611-1615.

Cai X, Chen FY, Han JY, et al. (2005). Reversal of Multi-drug resistance of HL-60 adriamycin resistant leukemia cell line by quercetin and its mechanisms. Chin J Oncol, 27(6):326-329.

Cao CM, Ding XD, Wang XH, Liu P. (2005). Clinical study of shengmai injection in its reversing MDR effect in late phase colon carcinoma patients. Shandong J Tradit Chin Med, 24(9):529-532.

Cao Y, Zhang D, Zheng GJ, Yang Y, Zhang J. (2004). Study on drug resistance reversion and mechanism of bushen huayu jiedu formula in lung cancer cells of drug resistance. Shandong J Trad Chin Med, 23(2):100-104.

Cao Y, Xia Q, Meng H, Zhong A. (2008). Pharmacological effects of serum containing chinese medicine bushen huayu jiedu compound recipe in lung cancer drug-resistance cells. Chin J Integr Med, 14(1):46-50.

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.

Choi BH, Kim CG, Lim Y, Shin SY, Lee YH. (2008). Curcumin down-regulates the Multi-drug resistance mdr1b gene by inhibiting the PI3K/Akt/NF kappa B pathway. Cancer Lett, 259(1):111-118.

Chen XY, Liu JT. (2003). Study on tumor cells' Multi-drug resistance and its reversion by Chinese herbs. J Chin Integr Med, 1(3):221-225.

Dong QH, Zheng S, Lu QH. (2002). Study on the effect of Kanglaite injection on MDR human leukemia cell lines. J Pract Oncol, 17(1):24-26.

Feng ZQ, Guo Y, Zhu NX, et al. (2003). The experiment of SANGENG mixture decoction on reversing Multi-drug resistance. Bull Chin Cancer, 12(6):370-371.

Fu YL and Chen T. (2008). Research of traditional Chinese medicine in the treatment of leukemia: current status. Journal of Chinese Integrative Medicine, 6: 867–872.

Ganta S, Amiji M. (2009). Coadministration of paclitaxel and curcumin in nanoemulsion formulations To overcome Multi-drug resistance in tumor cells. Mol Pharm, 6(3):928-939.

Gao RL, Lin XJ, Qian XD, Chen XH, Niu YP. (2004). Effect of ginsenosides and panaxatriol extracted from ginseng on inhibition of proliferation, inducing apoptosis and cytotoxic drug sensitivity in leukemic cells. J Chin Med Res, 4(2):97-99.

Gottesman MM. (2002). Mechanisms of cancer drug resistance. Annu Rev Med, 53:615-617.

Gu W, Zhai XF, Zhang YN, Ling CQ. (2007). In vitro study of Ganli injection on reversing acquired Multi-drug resistance of human hepatocellular carcinoma. Chin Trad Herbal Drugs, 38(6):871-874.

Guo Y, Xie CS, Feng ZQ. (2002). The study of effects on accumulation and efflux of intracellular adrimycine with FFTLG for Multi-drug-resistant cell lines K562/ADR and K562/VCR in vitro. Chin J Mod Appl Pharm, 19(4):268-272.

Huang M, Jin J, Sun H, Liu GT. (2008). Reversal of P-glycoprotein-mediated Multi-drug resistance of cancer cells by five schizandrins isolated from the Chinese herb Fructus Schizandrae. Cancer Chemother Pharmacol, 62(6):1015-1026.

Kim SH, Yeo GS, Lim YS, et al. (1998). Suppression of Multi-drug resistance via inhibition of heat shock factor by quercetin in MDR cells. Exp Mol Med, 30(2):87-92.

Kim SW, Kwon HY, Chi DW, (2003). Reversal of P-glycoprotein-mediated Multi-drug resistance by ginsenoside Rg3. Biochem Pharmacol, 65(1):75-82.

Kioka N, Hosokawa N, Komano T, et al. (1992). Quercetin, a bioflavonoid, inhibits the increase of human Multi-drug resistance gene (MDR1) expression caused by arsenite. FEBS Lett, 301(3):307-309.

Kothan S, Dechsupa S, Leger G, et al. (2004). Spontaneous mitochondrial membrane potential change during apoptotic induction by quercetin in K562 and K562/adr cells. Can J Physiol Pharm, 82(12):1084-1090.

La Porta CAM. (2007). Drug resistance in melanoma: new perspectives. Curr Med Chem, 14(4):387-91.

Leonard GD, Fojo T, Bates SE. (2003). The role of ABC transporters in clinical practice. Oncologist, 8(5):411-424.

Li Y, Wang ZZ, Yu TF (2005). In vitro study on the reversal of Multi-drug resistance (MDR) in HL60/VCR cell line with ginsenoside – Rb1. J Radioimmunol, 18(5):362-365.

Limtrakul P, Anuchapreeda S, Buddhasukh D. (2004). Modulation of human Multi-drug resistance MDR-1 gene by natural curcuminoids. BMC Cancer, 4:13.

Limtrakul P, Chearwae W, Shukla S, Phisalphong C, Ambudkar SV. (2007). Modulation of function of three ABC drug transporters, P-glycoprotein (ABCB1), mitoxantrone resistance protein (ABCG2) and Multi-drug resistance protein 1 (ABCC1) by tetrahydrocurcumin, a major metabolite of curcumin. Mol Cell Biochem, 296(1-2):85-95.

Limtrakul P, Khantamat O, Pintha K. (2005). Inhibition of P-glycoprotein function and expression by kaempferol and quercetin. J Chemother, 17(1):86-95.

Lin SY, Qin ZQ, Xu YF, Wu LC, Liu LM. (2002). Significance of combination shenmal injection, tamoxifen and nifedipine in treatment stage IV non-small-cell lung cancer. Chin J Cancer Prev Treat, 9(4):454-455.

Lin GF. (2007). Current situation in studying the reversing effect in Multi-drug-resistant in cancer cells by TCM. China Pharm, 16(10):63-64.

Liu LL, Liu YE, Fang GT. (2008). Reversal effect of Panax notoginseng saponins on Multi-drug resistance breast cancer cell MCF/ADM. Lishizhen Med Materia Med Res, 19(4):954-956.

Meszaros A, Balogh G. (2009). Multiple Drug Resistance. Gazelle Distribution, Lancaster, UK.

Park JD, Kim DS, Kwon HY, et al. (1996). Effects of ginseng saponin on modulation of Multi-drug resistance. Arch Pharm Res, 19(3):213-218.

Wang L. (2003). Reversing drug resistance of human erythroleukemia cell line K562/DOX on DOX by total saponings Panax ginseng. J Chongqing Med Univ, 28(4):424-427, 435.

Piwocka K, Bielak-Mijewska A, Sikora E. (2002). Curcumin induces caspase-3-independent apoptosis in human Multi-drug-resistant cells. Ann N Y Acad Sci, 973:250-254.

Qu Y, Liu SQ, Zhang XB, et al. (2006). Reversal of P-glycoprotein mediated Multi-drug resistance by traditional Chinese medicines. Nat Prod Res Dev, 18(6):932-936.

Sadava D, Ahn J, Zhan M, et al. (2002). Effects of four Chinese herbal extracts on drug-sensitive and Multi-drug-resistant small-cell lung carcinoma cells. Cancer Chemother Pharmacol, 49(4):261-266.

Shi XK, Zhang YJ, Zhao CJ. (1999). The reverse effects of ginseng saponin Rb1 on Multi-drug resistance of human leukemic cell line K562/HHT in vitro. Acta Acad Med Militaris Tertiae, 21(11):825-827.

Si YQ, Tien TD (2005). The Multi-drug-resistant reversing effect of total Panax notoginseng saponins studied in K562/VCR cell line. Chin J Tradit Med Sci Technol, 12(5):292-294.

Slaninová I, Brezinová L, Koubíková L, Slanina J. (2009). Dibenzocyclooctadiene lignans overcome drug resistance in lung cancer cells–study of structure-activity relationship. Toxicol In Vitro, 23(6):1047-1054.

Stewart A, Steiner J, Mellows G, et al. (2000). Phase I trial of XR9576 in healthy volunteers demonstrates modulation of Pglycoprotein in CD56+ lymphocytes after oral and intravenous administration. Clin Cancer Res, 6(11):4186-4191.

Sun GP, Wang H, Shen YX, et al. (2004). Study on effects of paeonol in inhibiting growth of K562 and inducing its apoptosis. Chin Pharmacol Bull, 20(5):550-552.

Szakacs G, Paterson JK, Ludwig JA, Booth-Genthe C, Gottesman MM. (2006). Targeting Multi-drug resistance in cancer. Nat Rev Drug Discov, 5(3):219-234.

Tang XQ, Bi H, Feng JQ, Cao JG. (2005). Effect of curcumin on Multi-drug resistance in resistant human gastric carcinoma cell line SGC7901/VCR. Acta Pharmacol Sin, 26(8):1009-1016.

Toppmeyer D, Seidman AD, Pollak M, et al. (2002). Safety and efficacy of the Multi-drug resistance inhibitor Incel (biricodar; VX-710) in combination with paclitaxel for advanced breast cancer refractory to paclitaxel. Clin Cancer Res, 8(3):670-678.

Tsuruo T, Iida H, Tsukagoshi S, Sakurai Y. (1981). Overcoming of vincristine resistance in P388 leukemia in vivo and in vitro through enhanced cytotoxicity of vincristine and vinblastine by verapamil. Cancer Res, 41(5):1967-1972.

Twentyman PR. (1992). Cyclosporins as drug resistance modifiers. Biochem Pharmacol, 43(1):109-117.

Um Y, Cho S, Woo HB, et al. (2008). Synthesis of curcumin mimics with Multi-drug resistance reversal activities. Bioorg Med Chem, 16(7):3608-3615.

Wan CK, Zhu GY, Shen XL, et al. (2006). Gomisin A alters substrate interaction and reverses P-glycoprotein-mediated Multi-drug resistance in HepG2-DR cells. Biochem Pharmacol, 72(7):824-837.

Wang Y, Chao PL, Hsiu SL, Wen K, Hou Y. (2004). Lethal quercetin-digoxin interaction in pigs. Life Sci, 74(10):1191-1197.

Wang J, Xia Y, Wang H, Hou Z. (2007). Chinese herbs of Shenghe powder reverse Multi-drug resistance of gastric carcinoma SGC-7901. Integr Cancer Ther, 6(4):400-404

Watson JV. (1991). Introduction to Flow Cytometry Cambridge. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.

Xu L, Wang MY, Xu DQ, Zhou CX. (2005). Experimental study on modified 'Sanwubai Powder' in affecting multi-drug resistance gene expression of tumor. Shanghai J Tradit Chin Med, 39(8):59-60.

Yang L, Wei DD, Chen Z, et al. (2011). Reversal effects of traditional Chinese herbs on Multi-drug resistance in cancer cells. Natural Product Research (Formerly Natural Product Letters), 25(19):1885-1889. doi: 10.1080/14786419.2010.541395

Ying HC, Zhang SL, Lv J. (2007). Drug-resistant reversing effect of curcumin on COC1/DDP and its mechanism. J Mod Oncol, 15(5):604-607.

Yu LF, Wu YL, Zhang YP. (2001). Reversal of drug resistance in the vincristine-resistant human gastric cancer cell lines MKN28/VCR by emulsion of seminal oil of Brucea Javanica. World Chin J Digestol, 9(4):376-378.

Coniferyl Ferulate

Cancer: Lung

Action: Multi-drug resistance reversal

MDR

Glutathione S-transferase (GST) is a key enzyme in the development of multi-drug resistance (MDR) in tumors. Inhibition of the expression, or activity, of GST has emerged as a promising therapeutic strategy for the reversal of MDR.

Coniferyl ferulate (CF), isolated from the root of Radix Angelica sinensis (RAS), showed strong inhibition of human placental GST. Using the high-throughput screening model, CF's 50% inhibition concentration (IC50) was 0.3   µM, which was greater than the established GSTP1-1 inhibitor, ethacrynic acid (EA).

Moreover, CF showed strong apoptotic activity and could markedly decrease the overexpression of P-gp. The results demonstrated that CF could inhibit GST activity in a concentration-dependent manner and showed a potential MDR reversal effect for anti-tumor adjuvant therapy.

CF demonstrates strong GST inhibitory activity and may serve as a prospective MDR reversal agent in the treatment of cancer. In addition, CF could potentially be used as a promising chemo-sensitizer capable of indirectly regulating P-gp expression via modulation of GST activity, and with fewer adverse effects. Further investigation of CF in anti-tumor adjuvant therapy is warranted (Chen et al., 2013).

Ferulic acid (FA) is widely considered as a biologically active component in Angelica sinensis, and used as one of the marker compounds for the quality control of Angelica sinensis. However, in A. sinensis, FA mainly exists as its ester, coniferyl ferulate (CF). The potency of CF is much higher than that of FA, and the IC50 values for AA, ADP and THR were 7.1 ± 0.3, 276.4 ± 53.4 and 77.5 ± 23.1 µg/ml, respectively (Yu et al., 2009).

References

Chen C, Wu C, Lu X, Yan, Z, Gao, H, Li, S (2013). Coniferyl ferulate, a strong inhibitor of glutathione S-transferase isolated from radix Angelicae sinensis, reverses Multi-drug resistance and downregulates P-glycoprotein. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 2013(2013), ID639083. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/639083.


Yu Y, Lin BQ, Yu L, et al. (2009). Inhibitory Effects of Two Ferulates from Angelica Sinensis on Platelet Aggregation and Oxytocin-induced Uterine Contraction. The Open Bioactive Compounds Journal., 2009, 2, 43-46.

Genistein (See also Daidzien)

Cancer:
Breast, kidney, prostate, renal., liver, endometrial., ovarian

Action: Anti-angiogenesis, cell-cycle arrest, cancer stem cells, VEGF, radiotherapy, sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1)

Genistein is a natural isoflavone phytoestrogen present in a number of plants, including soy, fava, and kudzu (Glycine max [(L.) Merr.], Vicia faba (L.), Pueraria lobata [(Willd.) Ohwi]).

Phytoestrogens

Phytoestrogens have been investigated at the epidemiological., clinical and molecular levels to determine their potential health benefits. The two major groups of phytoestrogens, isoflavones and lignans, are abundant in soy products and flax respectively, but are also present in a variety of other foods. It is thought that these estrogen-like compounds may protect against chronic diseases, such as hormone-dependent cancers, cardiovascular disease and osteoporosis (Stark & Madar, 2002).

S-Equol Production and Isoflavone Metabolism

S-Equol and Breast Cancer

Differences in ability to metabolize daidzein to equol might help explain inconsistent findings about isoflavones and breast cancer. Tseng et al. (2013) examined equol-producing status in relation to breast density, a marker of breast cancer risk, and evaluated whether an association of isoflavone intake with breast density differs by equol-producing status in a sample of Chinese immigrant women. In their sample, 30% were classified as equol producers. In adjusted linear regression models, equol producers had significantly lower mean dense tissue area (32.8 vs. 37.7 cm(2), P = 0.03) and lower mean percent breast density (32% vs. 35%, P = 0.03) than nonproducers. Significant inverse associations of isoflavone intake with dense area and percent density were apparent, but only in equol producers (interaction P = 0.05 for both).

Although these findings warrant confirmation in a larger sample, they offer a possible explanation for the inconsistent findings about soy intake and breast density and possibly breast cancer risk as well. The findings further suggest the importance of identifying factors that influence equol-producing status and exploring appropriate targeting of interventions.

S-Equol and Dietary Factors

S-(-)equol, an intestinally derived metabolite of the soy isoflavone daidzein, is proposed to enhance the efficacy of soy diets. Setchell et al. (2013) performed a comprehensive dietary analysis of 143 macro- and micro-nutrients in 159 healthy adults to determine whether the intake of specific nutrients favors equol production. Three-day diet records were collected and analyzed using Nutrition Data System for Research software and S-(-)equol was measured in urine by mass spectrometry.

Equol producers accounted for 29.6% of participants. No significant differences were observed for total protein, carbohydrate, fat, saturated fat, or fiber intakes between equol producers and nonproducers. However, principal component analysis revealed differences in several nutrients, including higher intakes of polyunsaturated fatty acids (P = 0.039), maltose (P = 0.02), and vitamins A (P = 0.01) and E (P = 0.035) and a lower intake of total cholesterol (P = 0.010) in equol producers.

Subtle differences in some nutrients may influence the ability to produce equol.

S-Equol and Dietary Factors; Fats

The soy isoflavones, daidzein and genistein, and the lignans, matairesinol and secoisolariciresinol, are phytoestrogens metabolized extensively by the intestinal microflora. Considerable important evidence is already available that shows extensive interindividual variation in isoflavone metabolism. There was a 16-fold variation in total isoflavonoid excretion in urine after the high-isoflavone treatment period. The variation in urinary equol excretion was greatest (664-fold), and subjects fell into two groups: poor equol excretors and good equol excretors (36%). A significant negative correlation was found between the proportion of energy from fat in the habitual diet and urinary equol excretion (r = -0.55; p = 0.012). Good equol excretors consumed less fat as percentage of energy than poor excretors (26 +/- 2.3% compared with 35 +/- 1.6%, p < 0.01) and more carbohydrate as percentage of energy than poor excretors (55 +/- 2.9% compared with 47 +/- 1.7%, p < 0.05).

It is suggested that the dietary fat intake decreases the capacity of gut microbial flora to synthesize equol (Rowland et al., 2000).

Isoflavones and Fermented Soy Foods

Serum concentrations of total isoflavones after 1–4 hours were significantly higher in the aglycone-rich fermented soybeans (Fsoy) group than in the glucoside-rich non-fermented soybeans (Soy) group. The Fsoy group showed significantly higher maximum concentration (Cmax: 2.79 ± 0.13 vs 1.74 ± 0.13 µmol L(-1) ) and area under the curve (AUC(0-24 h) : 23.78 ± 2.41 vs 19.95 ± 2.03 µmol day L(-1) ) and lower maximum concentration time (Tmax: 1.00 ± 0.00 vs 5.00 ± 0.67 h) compared with the Soy group. The cumulative urinary excretion of total isoflavones after 2 hours was significantly higher in the Fsoy group than in the Soy group. Individual isoflavones (daidzein, genistein and glycitein) showed similar trends to total isoflavones. Equol (a metabolite from daidzein) did not differ between the two groups.

The results of this study demonstrated that the isoflavones of aglycone-rich Fsoy were absorbed faster and in greater amounts than those of glucoside-rich Soy in postmenopausal Japanese women (Okabe et al., 2011).

Phytoestrogens and Breast Cancer; ER+/ER-, ER α /ER β

Dietary-derived Anti-angiogenic Compounds

Consumption of a plant-based diet can prevent the development and progression of chronic diseases that are associated with extensive neovascularization; however, little is known about the mechanisms. To determine whether prevention might be associated with dietary-derived angiogenesis inhibitors, the urine of healthy human subjects consuming a plant-based diet was fractionated and the fractions examined for their ability to inhibit the proliferation of vascular endothelial cells.

The isoflavonoid genistein was the most potent, and inhibited endothelial cell proliferation and in vitro angiogenesis at concentrations giving half-maximal inhibition of 5 and 150 microM, respectively. Genistein concentrations in urine of subjects consuming a plant-based diet are in the micromolar range, while those of subjects consuming a traditional Western diet are lower by a factor of > 30. The high excretion of genistein in urine of vegetarians and in addition to these results suggest that genistein may contribute to the preventive effect of a plant-based diet on chronic diseases, including solid tumors, by inhibiting neovascularization.

Thus, genistein may represent a member of a new class of dietary-derived anti-angiogenic compounds (Fotsis et al., 1993).

ERβ as a Down-regulator of ER+ Breast Cancer

The estrogen receptor (ER) isoform known as ERβ has become the focus of intense investigation as a potential drug target. The existence of clear-cut differences in ERβ and ERα expression suggests that tissues could be differentially targeted with ligands selective for either isoform (Couse et al., 1997; Enmark et al., 1997). In particular, the fact that ER β is widely expressed but not the primary estrogen receptor in, for example, the uterus (where estrogenic effects are mediated via ERα) (Harris, Katzenellenbogen, & Katzenellenbogen, 2002) opens up the possibility of targeting other tissues while avoiding certain classical estrogenic effects.

A major advance toward understanding how some phytoestrogens achieve modest ERβ selectivity was the X-ray structure determination of the ERβ ligand binding domain (LBD) complexed with genistein (GEN) (Pike et al., 1999), a 40-fold ERβ-selective ligand (Harris et al., 2002). This study clearly showed that there are only two residue substitutions in close proximity to GEN: ERα Leu384 is replaced by ER β Met336, and ERα Met421 is replaced by ER β Ile373.

ERbeta works as counter partner of ERalpha through inhibition of the transactivating function of ERalpha by heterodimerization, distinct regulation on several specific promoters by ERalpha or ERbeta, and ERbeta-specific regulated genes which are probably related to its anti-proliferative properties. Epidemiological studies of hormone replacement therapy and isoflavone (genistein) consumption indicate the possible contribution of ERbeta-specific signaling in breast cancer prevention. A selective estrogen receptor modulator, which works as an antagonist of ERalpha and an agonist of ERbeta, may be a promising chemo-preventive treatment (Saji, Hirose, & Toi, 2005).

Genistein and Apoptosis

The association between consumption of genistein containing soybean products and lower risk of breast cancer suggests a cancer chemo-preventive role for genistein. Consistent with this suggestion, exposing cultured human breast cancer cells to genistein inhibits cell proliferation, although this is not completely understood. To better understand how genistein works, the ability of genistein to induce apoptosis was compared in phenotypically dissimilar MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer cells that express the wild-type and mutant p53 gene, respectively.

After 6 days of incubation with 50 microM genistein, MCF-7, but not MDA-MB-231 cells, showed morphological signs of apoptosis. Marginal proteolytic cleavage of poly-(ADP-ribose)-polymerase and significant DNA fragmentation were also detected in MCF-7 cells.

In elucidating these findings, it was determined that after 2 days of incubation with genistein, MCF-7, but not MDA-MB-231 cells, had significantly higher levels of p53. Accordingly, the expression of certain proteins modulated by p53 was also studied. Levels of p21 increased in both of the genistein-treated cell lines, suggesting that p21 gene expression was activated but in a p53-independent manner; whereas no significant changes in levels of the pro-apoptotic protein, Bax, were found. In MCF-7 cells, levels of the anti-apoptotic protein, Bcl-2, decreased slightly at 18–24 hours but then increased considerably after 48 hours. Hence, the Bax:Bcl-2 ratio initially increased but later decreased.

Data suggests that at the concentration tested, MCF-7 cells, in contrast to MDA-MB-231 cells, were sensitive to the induction of apoptosis by genistein. However, the roles of Bax and Bcl-2 are unclear (Xu & Loo, 2001).

Genistein Derivatives and Breast Cancer Inhibition

Genistein binds to estrogen receptors and stimulates growth at concentrations that would be achieved by a high soy diet, but inhibits growth at high experimental concentrations.

The estrogen receptor (ER) is a major target for the treatment of breast cancer cells. Genistein, a soy isoflavone, possesses a structure similar to estrogen and can both mimic and antagonize estrogen effects although at high concentrations it inhibits breast cancer cell proliferation. Hence, to enhance the anti-cancer activity of Genistein at lower concentrations, seven structurally modified derivatives of Genistein based on the structural requirements for an optimal anti-cancer effect were synthesised. Among those seven, three derivatives showed high anti-proliferative activity with IC(50) levels in the range of 1-2.5 µM, i.e., at much lower concentrations range than Genistein itself, in three ER-positive breast cancer cell lines (MCF-7, 21PT and T47D) studied. In our analysis, we noticed that at IC(50) concentrations, the MA-6, MA-8 and MA-19 Genistein derivatives induced apoptosis, inhibited ER-α messenger RNA expression and increased the ratio of ER-β to ER-α levels in a manner comparable to that of the parent compound Genistein.

Of note, these three modified Genistein derivatives exerted their effects at concentrations 10–15 times lower than the parent compound, decreasing the likelihood of significant ER- α pathway activation, which has been a concern for Genistein. Hence these compounds might play a useful role in breast cancer chemoprevention (Marik et al., 2011).

Genistein and ER α

To determine the effects of low-dose, long-term genistein exposure MCF-7 breast cancer cells were cultured in 10nM genistein for 10-12 weeks and investigated whether or not this long-term genistein treatment (LTGT) altered the expression of estrogen receptor alpha (ERalpha) and the activity of the PI3-K/Akt signaling pathway. This is known to be pivotal in the signaling of mitogens such as oestradiol (E(2)), insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) and epidermal growth factor (EGF). LTGT significantly reduced the growth promoting effects of E(2) and increased the dose-dependent growth-inhibitory effect of the PI3-K inhibitor, LY 294002, compared to untreated control MCF-7 cells.

This was associated with a significant decreased protein expression of total Akt and phosphorylated Akt but not ERalpha. Rapamycin, an inhibitor of one of the downstream targets of Akt, mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), also dose-dependently inhibited growth but the response to this drug was similar in LTGT and control MCF-7 cells. The protein expression of liver receptor homologue-1 (LRH1), an orphan nuclear receptor implicated in tumorigenesis was not affected by LTGT.

These results show that LTGT results in a down-regulation of the PI3-K/Akt signaling pathway and may be a mechanism through which genistein could offer protection against breast cancer (Anastasius et al., 2009).

Genistein and ER+/ER-

Genistein was found to cause a dose-dependent growth inhibition of the two hormone-sensitive cell lines T47D and ZR75.1 and of the two hormone-independent cell lines MDAMB-231 and BT20. Flow cytometric analysis of cells treated for 4 days with 15 and 30 M genistein showed a dose-dependent accumulation in the G2M phase of the cell-cycle. At the highest tested concentration, there was a 7-fold increase in the percentage of cells in G2M (63%) with respect to the control (9%) in the case of T47D cells and a 2.4-fold increase in the case of BT20. An intermediate 4-fold accumulation was observed in the case of MDAMB-231 and ZR75.1. The G2M arrest was coupled with a parallel depletion of the G0/G1 phase.

To understand the mechanism of action underlying the block in G2M induced by genistein, Cappelletti et al. (2000) investigated the expression and the activity of cyclins and of cyclin-dependent kinases specifically involved in the G2M transition. As expected, p34cdc-2 expression, monitored by Western blotting, was unaffected by genistein treatment in all cell lines. With the exception of the T47D cell line, we revealed an increase in the tyrosine phosphorylated form of p34, suggesting an inactivation of the p34cdc-2 catalytic activity consequent to treatment of cells with genistein. In fact, immunoprecipitates from genistein-treated MDAMB-231 and BT20 cells displayed a 4-fold decrease in kinase activity evaluated using the histone H1 as substrate.

Conversely, no variation in kinase activity was observed between treated and untreated ZR75.1 cells despite the increase in p34 phosphorylation. In cells treated with 30 M genistein, cyclin B1 (p62) increased 2.8-,8-and 103-fold, respectively, in BT20, MDAMB-231, and ZR75.1 cells, suggesting an accumulation of the p62, which is instead rapidly degraded in cycling cells. No effects were observed on cyclin expression in T47D cells.

We therefore conclude that genistein causes a G2M arrest in breast cancer cell lines, but that such growth arrest is not necessarily coupled with deregulation of the p34cdc-2/cyclin B1 complex only in all of the studied cell lines.

Genistein and ER+/ER-; MDR

Genistein is a potent inhibitor of the growth of the human breast carcinoma cell lines, MDA-468 (estrogen receptor negative), and MCF-7 and MCF-7-D-40 (estrogen receptor positive) (IC50 values from 6.5 to 12.0 µg/ml). The presence of the estrogen receptor is not required for the isoflavones to inhibit tumor cell growth (MDA-468 vs MCF-7 cells). In addition, the effects of genistein and biochanin A are not attenuated by over expression of the multi-drug resistance gene product (MCF-7-D40 vs MCF-7 cells (Peterson et al., 1991).

Studies have shown that genistein exerts multiple suppressive effects on both estrogen receptor positive (ER+) as well as estrogen receptor negative (ER-) human breast carcinoma lines suggesting that the mechanisms of these effects may be independent of ER pathways.

In the present study however Shao et al. (2000) provide evidence that in the ER+ MCF-7, T47D and 549 lines but not in the ER-MDA-MB-231 and MDA-MB-468 lines both presumed 'ER-dependent' and 'ER-independent' actions of genistein are mediated through ER pathways. Genistein's anti-proliferative effects are estrogen dependent in these ER+ lines, being more pronounced in estrogen-containing media and in the presence of exogenous 17-beta estradiol. Genistein also inhibits the expression of ER-downstream genes including pS2 and TGF-beta in these ER+ lines and this inhibition is also dependent on the presence of estrogen. Genistein inhibits estrogen-induced protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) activity. Genistein is only a weak transcriptional activator and actually decreases ERE-CAT levels induced by 17-beta estradiol in the ER+ lines.

Genistein also decreases steady state ER mRNA only in the presence of estrogen in the ER+ lines thereby manifesting another suppression of and through the ER pathway. Their observations resurrect the hypothesis that genistein functions as a 'good estrogen' in ER+ breast carcinomas. Since chemo-preventive effects of genistein would be targeted to normal ER-positive ductal-lobular cells of the breast, this 'good estrogen' action of genistein is most relevant to our understanding of chemoprevention.

Genistein and Concentration

The anti-proliferative activity of the isoflavones daidzein and genistein were investigated in three breast cancer cell lines with different patterns of estrogen receptor (ER) and c erbB 2 protein expression (ERα positive MCF 7 cells, c erbB 2 positive SK BR 3 cells and ERα/c erbB 2 positive ZR 75 1). After treatment at various concentrations (1 200 µM for 72 hours), the effect of daidzein and genistein on the proliferation of different cell types varied; these effects were found to be associated with ERα and c erbB 2 expression. Daidzein and genistein exhibited biphasic effects (stimulatory or inhibitory) on proliferation and ERα expression in MCF 7 cells. Although 1 µM daidzein significantly stimulated cell growth, ERα expression was unaffected. However, genistein showed marked increases in proliferation and ERα expression after exposure to <10 µM genistein.

Notably, the inhibition of cell proliferation by 200 µM genistein was greater compared to that by daidzein at the same concentration. Daidzein and genistein significantly inhibited proliferation of SK BR 3 and ZR 75 1 cells in a dose-dependent manner. In addition, ERα and c erbB 2 expression was reduced by daidzein and genistein in both SK BR 3 and ZR 75 1 cells in a dose-dependent manner. However, the effect of genistein was greater compared to that of daidzein.

In conclusion, the isoflavones daidzein and genistein showed anti breast cancer activity, which was associated with expression of the ERα and c erbB 2 receptors (Choi et al., 2013).

ER- α / ER β Receptors

Isoflavones are phytoestrogens that have been linked to both beneficial as well as adverse effects in relation to cell proliferation and cancer risks. The mechanisms that could be involved in this dualistic mode of action were investigated. One mechanism relates to the different ultimate cellular effects of activation of estrogen receptor (ER) α, promoting cell proliferation, and of ERβ, promoting apoptosis, with the major soy isoflavones genistein and daidzein activating especially ERβ.

A second mode of action includes the role of epigenetics, including effects of isoflavones on DNA methylation, histone modification and miRNA expression patterns. The overview presented reveals that we are only at the start of unraveling the complex underlying mode of action for effects of isoflavones, both beneficial or adverse, on cell proliferation and cancer risks. It is evident that whatever model system will be applied, its relevance to human tissues with respect to ERα and ERβ levels, co-repressor and co-activator characteristics as well as its relevance to human exposure regimens, needs to be considered and defined (Rietjens et al., 2013).

Genistein and ER+/ER-, ER- α / ER β Receptors

A novel mechanism of adipokine, adiponectin (APN) -mediated signaling that influences mammary epithelial cell proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis to modify breast cancer risk has been identified. It was demonstrated that early dietary exposure to soy protein isolate induced mammary tissue APN production without corresponding effects on systemic APN levels. In estrogen receptor (ER)-negative MCF-10A cells, recombinant APN promoted lobuloalveolar differentiation by inhibiting oncogenic signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 activity.

In ER-positive HC11 cells, recombinant APN increased ERβ expression, inhibited cell proliferation, and induced apoptosis. Using the estrogen-responsive 4X-estrogen response element promoter-reporter construct to assess ER transactivation and small interfering RNA targeting of ERα and ERβ, Rahal et al. (2011) show that APN synergized with the soy phytoestrogen genistein to promote ERβ signaling in the presence of estrogen (17β-estradiol) and ERβ-specific agonist 2,3-bis(4-hydroxyphenyl)-propionitrile and to oppose ERα signaling in the presence of the ERα-specific agonist 4,4',4'-(4-propyl-(1H)-pyrazole-1,3,5-triyl)trisphenol.

The enhancement of ERβ signaling with APN + genistein co-treatments was associated with induction of apoptosis, increased expression of pro-apoptotic/prodifferentiation genes (Bad, p53, and Pten), and decreased anti-apoptotic (Bcl2 and survivin) transcript levels. These results suggest that mammary-derived APN can influence adjacent epithelial function by ER-dependent and ER-independent mechanisms that are consistent with reduction of breast cancer risk and suggest local APN induction by dietary factors as a targeted approach for promotion of breast health.

Genistein and Non-breast Cancer

Genistein Concentrations; Endometrial Cancer

The influence of two phytoestrogens (Genistein and Daidzein) on estrogen-related receptor-α in endometrial cancer cell line Ishikawa was investigated on the proliferation of the cells in this cell line. Ishikawa cells were incubated with different concentrations of Genistein and Daidzein (40, 20, 10, 5 µmol/L) for 24 hours or 48 hours, followed by Real-Time PCR for analyzing the expression of ERR-α mRNA in the cell line. MTT assay was then performed to evaluate the proliferation of Ishikawa cells.

The expression level of ERR-α mRNA in Ishikawa cells was higher than that of the control group after being dealt for 24 hours or 48 hours with Genistein, and the concentration 20 µmol/L was most effective. Nevertheless, this up-regulation was blocked when the cells were treated with 40 µmol/L Genistein. Lower concentration (5, 10 µmol/L) Genistein had depressant effect on proliferation of the cells, while higher concentrations (20, 40 µmol/L) had stimulant effect. After being treated with different concentrations of Daidzein, the expression of ERR- α mRNA in all experimental groups was significantly higher than that in the control group. In the 24 hour group, the concentration 40 µmol/L had most obvious effect; but in the 48 hour group, the concentration 20 µmol/L had most obvious effect, and this up-regulation was blocked when the concentration was elevated to 40 µmol/L.

Noticeably, all concentrations of Daidzein had depressant effect on the proliferation of Ishikawa cells in both 24 hour and 48 hour groups. In the 24 hour group, lower concentrations were more effective, but in the 48 hour group, concentration showed no significant effect. In lower concentrations, both Genistein and Daidzein have up-regulation effect on the expression of ERR-α, and block the proliferation of Ishikawa cells; but in higher concentrations, the up-regulation effect on ERR-α mRNA expression by these two phytoestrogens is not obvious. Genistein stimulates the proliferation of lshikawa cells in higher concentrations, while Daidzein suppresses the proliferation, especially in lower concentrations (Xin et al., 2009).

Genistein and VEGF; Ovarian Cancer

Genistein represses NF-kappaB (NF-κB), a pro-inflammatory transcription factor, and inhibits pro-inflammatory cytokines such as TNF-α and IL-6 in epithelial ovarian cancer. Additionally, it has been shown to stabilize p53 protein, sensitize TRAIL (TNF receptor apoptosis-inducing ligand) induce apoptosis, and prevent or delay chemotherapy-resistance. Recent studies further indicate that genistein potently inhibits VEGF production and suppresses ovarian cancer cell metastasis in vitro.

Based on widely published in vitro and mouse-model data, some anti-inflammatory phytochemicals appear to exhibit activity in modulating the tumor microenvironment. Specifically, apiegenin, baicalein, curcumin, EGCG, genistein, luteolin, oridonin, quercetin, and wogonin repress NF-kappaB (NF-κB, a pro-inflammatory transcription factor) and inhibit pro-inflammatory cytokines such as TNF-α and IL-6. Recent studies further indicate that apigenin, genistein, kaempferol, luteolin, and quercetin potently inhibit VEGF production and suppress 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 (Chen, Michael, & Butler-Manuel, 2012).

Renal Cell Carcinoma, Prostate Cancer; Radiotherapy

The KCI-18 RCC cell line was generated from a patient with papillary renal cell carcinoma. Tumor cells metastasize from the primary renal tumor to the lungs, liver and mesentery mimicking the progression of RCC in humans. Treatment of established kidney tumors with genistein demonstrated a tendency to stimulate the growth of the primary kidney tumor and increase the incidence of metastasis to the mesentery lining the bowel. In contrast, when given in conjunction with kidney tumor irradiation, genistein significantly inhibited the growth and progression of established kidney tumors. These findings confirm the potentiation of radiotherapy by genistein in the orthotopic RCC model as previously shown in orthotopic models of prostate cancer. These studies in both RCC and prostate tumor models demonstrate that the combination of genistein with primary tumor irradiation is a more effective and safer therapeutic approach as the tumor growth and progression are inhibited both in the primary and metastatic sites (Gilda et al., 2007).

Cell-cycle Arrest

Genistein treatment increased Wee1 levels and decreased phospho-Wee1 (Ser 642). Moreover, genistein substantially decreased the Ser473 and Thr308 phosphorylation of Akt and up-regulated PTEN expression. Down-regulation of PTEN by siRNA in genistein-treated cells increased phospho-Wee1 (Ser642), whereas it decreased phospho-Cdc2 (Tyr15), resulting in decreased G2/M cell-cycle-arrest. Therefore, induction of G2/M cell-cycle arrest by genistein involved up-regulation of PTEN (Liu et al., 2013).

Cancer Stem Cells (CSCs)

Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are cells that exist within a tumor with a capacity for self-renewal and an ability to differentiate, giving rise to heterogeneous populations of cancer cells. These cells are increasingly being implicated in resistance to conventional therapeutics and have also been implicated in tumor recurrence. Several cellular signaling pathways including Notch, Wnt, phosphoinositide-3-kinase-Akt-mammalian target of rapamycin pathways, and known markers such as CD44, CD133, CD166, ALDH, etc. have been associated with CSCs.

Here, we have reviewed our current understanding of self-renewal pathways and factors that help in the survival of CSCs with special emphasis on those that have been documented to be modulated by well characterized natural agents such as curcumin, sulforaphane, resveratrol, genistein, and epigallocatechin gallate (Dandawate et al., 2013).

Genistein and Sex Hormone-binding Globulin (SHBG)

Studies have indicated a correlation between a high level of urinary lignans and isoflavonoid phytoestrogens, particularly genistein, and a low incidence of hormone-dependent cancers, such as breast and prostate cancer. Previously it has been observed that a vegetarian diet is associated with high plasma levels of sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), reducing clearance of sex hormones and probably risk of breast and prostate cancer. In the present study we investigated the in vitro effect of genistein on the production of SHBG by human hepatocarcinoma (Hep-G2) cells in culture and its effect on cell proliferation.

It has additionally been found that genistein not only significantly increases the SHBG production by Hep-G2 cells, but also suppresses the proliferation of those cancer cells already at a stage when SHBG production continues to be high. It is hence concluded that, in addition to the lignan enterolactone, the most abundant urinary isoflavonoid genistein stimulates SHBG production and inhibits Hep-G2 cancer cell proliferation (Mousavi et al., 1993).

Insulin-like Growth Factor-1 (IGF-1); Prostate Cancer

Elevated levels of insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) are associated with an increased risk of several different cancers, including prostate cancer. Inhibition of IGF-1 and the downstream signaling pathways mediated by the activation of the IGF-1 receptor (IGF-1R) may be involved in inhibiting prostate carcinogenesis. Genistein treatment caused a significant inhibition of IGF-1-stimulated cell growth. Flow cytometry analysis revealed that genistein significantly decreased the number of IGF-1-stimulated cells in the G0/G1 phase of the cell-cycle. In IGF-1-treated cells, genistein effectively inhibited the phosphorylation of IGF-1R and the phosphorylation of its downstream targets, such as Src, Akt, and glycogen synthase kinase-3β (GSk-3β). IGF-1 treatment decreased the levels of E-cadherin but increased the levels of β-catenin and cyclin D1.

However, genistein treatment greatly attenuated IGF-1-induced β-catenin signaling that correlated with increasing the levels of E-cadherin and decreasing cyclin D1 levels in PC-3 cells. In addition, genistein inhibited T-cell factor/lymphoid enhancer factor (TCF/LEF)-dependent transcriptional activity. These results showed that genistein effectively inhibited cell growth in IGF-1-stimulated PC-3 cells, possibly by inhibiting downstream of IGF-1R activation (Lee et al., 2012).

Sex Hormone-binding Globulin (SHBG); Hepatoma

Sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) is the main transport binding protein for sex steroid hormones in plasma and regulates their accessibility to target cells. Plasma SHBG is secreted by the liver under the control of hormones and nutritional factors. In the human hepatoma cell line (HepG2), thyroid and estrogenic hormones, and a variety of drugs including the anti-estrogen tamoxifen, the phytoestrogen, genistein and mitotane (Op'DDD) increase SHBG production and SHBG gene promoter activity. In contrast, monosaccharides (glucose or fructose) effectively decrease SHBG expression by inducing lipogenesis, which reduces hepatic HNF-4alpha levels, a transcription factor that plays a critical role in controlling the SHBG promoter. Interestingly, diminishing hepatic lipogenesis and free fatty acid liver biosynthesis also appear to be associated with the positive effects of thyroid hormones and PPARgamma antagonists on SHBG expression.

This mechanism provides a biological explanation for why SHBG is a sensitive biomarker of insulin resistance and the metabolic syndrome, and why low plasma SHBG levels are a risk factor for developing hyperglycemia and type 2 diabetes, especially in women (Pugeat et al., 2009).

Cancer: Pancreatic

Pancreatic cancer remains the fourth most common cause of cancer related death in the United States. Therefore, novel strategies for the prevention and treatment are urgently needed. Genistein is a prominent isoflavonoid found in soy products and has been proposed to be responsible for lowering the rate of pancreatic cancer in Asians. However, the molecular mechanism(s) by which genistein elicits its effects on pancreatic cancer cells has not been fully elucidated.

Wang et al., (2006) have previously shown that genistein induces apoptosis and inhibits the activation of nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB) pathway. Moreover, Notch signaling is known to play a critical role in maintaining the balance between cell proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis, and thereby may contribute to the development of pancreatic cancer. Hence, in our study, they investigated whether there is any cross talk between Notch and NF-kappaB during genistein-induced apoptosis in BxPC-3 pancreatic cancer cells. They found that genistein inhibits cell growth and induces apoptotic processes in BxPC-3 pancreatic cancer cells.

This was partly due to inhibition of Notch-1 activity. BxPC-3 cells transfected with Notch-1 cDNA showed induction of NF-kappaB activity, and this was inhibited by genistein treatment. From these results, we conclude that the inhibition of Notch-1 and NF-kappaB activity and their cross talk provides a novel mechanism by which genistein inhibits cell growth and induces apoptotic processes in pancreatic cancer cells.

References

Anastasius N, Boston S, Lacey M, Storing N, Whitehead SA. (2009). Evidence that low-dose, long-term genistein treatment inhibits oestradiol-stimulated growth in MCF-7 cells by down-regulation of the PI3-kinase/Akt signaling pathway. J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol, 116(1-2):50-55.


Cappelletti V, Fioravanti L, Miodini P, Di Fronzo G J. (2000). Genistein blocks breast cancer cells in the G2M phase of the cell-cycle. Cell. Biochem, 79(4):594-600. doi: 10.1002/1097-4644(20001215)79:4<594::AID-JCB80>3.0.CO;2-4.


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.


Choi EJ, Kim GH. (2013). Anti-proliferative activity of daidzein and genistein may be related to ERα /c-erbB-2 expression in human breast cancer cells. Mol Med Rep, 7(3):781-4. doi: 10.3892/mmr.2013.1283.


Couse JF, Lindzey J, Grandien K, Gustafsson JA, Korach KS. (1997). Tissue distribution and quantitative analysis of estrogen receptor-alpha (ERalpha) and estrogen receptor-beta (ERbeta) messenger ribonucleic acid in the wild-type and ERalpha-knockout mouse. Endocrinology, 138(1997):4613–4621


Dandawate P, Padhye S, Ahmad A, Sarkar FH. (2013). Novel strategies targeting cancer stem cells through phytochemicals and their analogs. Drug Deliv Transl Res, 3(2):165-182.


Enmark E, Peltohuikko M, Grandien K, et al. (1997). Human estrogen receptor beta-gene structure, chromosomal localization, and expression pattern. J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab, 82(1997):4258–4265.


Fotsis T, Pepper M, Adlercreutz H, et al. (1993). Genistein, a dietary-derived inhibitor of in vitro angiogenesis. Proc Natl Acad Sci, 90(7):2690-4.


Harris HA, Albert LM, Leathurby Y, et al. (2002). Evaluation of an estrogen receptor- β agonist in animal models of human disease. Endocrinology, 144(2003):4241–4249


Harris HA, Katzenellenbogen JA, Katzenellenbogen BS. (2002). Characterization of the biological roles of the estrogen receptors, ER alpha and ER beta, in estrogen target tissues in vivo through the use of an ER alpha-selective ligand. Endocrinology, 143(2002):4172–4177.


Hillman GG, Wang Y, Che M, et al. (2007). Progression of renal cell carcinoma is inhibited by genistein and radiation in an orthotopic model. BMC Cancer, 7:4. doi:10.1186/1471-2407-7-4.


Lee J, Ju J, Park S, et al. (2012). Inhibition of IGF-1 Signaling by Genistein: Modulation of E-Cadherin Expression and Down-regulation of β -Catenin Signaling in Hormone Refractory PC-3 Prostate Cancer Cells. Nutrition and Cancer, 64(1). doi:10.1080/01635581.2012.630161


Liu YL, Zhang GQ, Yang Y, et al. (2013). Genistein Induces G2/M Arrest in Gastric Cancer Cells by Increasing the Tumor Suppressor PTEN Expression. Nutr Cancer.


Marik R, Allu M, Anchoori R, et al. (2011). Potent genistein derivatives as inhibitors of estrogen receptor alpha-positive breast cancer. Cancer Biol Ther, 11(10):883-92.


Mousavi Y, Adlercreutz H. (1993). Genistein is an effective stimulator of sex hormone-binding globulin production in hepatocarcinoma human liver cancer cells and suppresses proliferation of these cells in culture. Steroids, 58(7):301-4.


Okabe Y, Shimazu T, Tanimoto H. (2011). Higher bioavailability of isoflavones after a single ingestion of aglycone-rich fermented soybeans compared with glucoside-rich non-fermented soybeans in Japanese postmenopausal women. J Sci Food Agric, 91(4):658-63. doi: 10.1002/jsfa.4228.


Peterson G, Barnes S. (1991). Genistein inhibition of the growth of human breast cancer cells: independence from estrogen receptors and the multi-drug resistance gene. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 179(1):661-667. doi:10.1016/0006-291X(91)91423-A.


Pike ACW, Brzozowski AM, Hubbard RE, et al. (1999). Structure of the ligand-binding domain of oestrogen receptor beta in the presence of a partial agonist and a full antagonist. EMBO J, 18(1999): 4608–4618


Pugeat M, Nader N, Hogeveen K, et al. (2010). Sex hormone-binding globulin gene expression in the liver: Drugs and the metabolic syndrome. Mol Cell Endocrinol, 316(1):53-9. doi: 10.1016/j.mce.2009.09.020.


Rahal OM, Simmen RC. (2011). Paracrine-Acting Adiponectin Promotes Mammary Epithelial Differentiation and Synergizes with Genistein to Enhance Transcriptional Response to Estrogen Receptor β Signaling. Endocrinology, 152(9):3409-21. doi: 10.1210/en.2011-1085.


Rietjens IM, Sotoca AM, Vervoort J, Louisse J. (2013). Mechanisms underlying the dualistic mode of action of major soy isoflavones in relation to cell proliferation and cancer risks. Mol Nutr Food Res, 57(1):100-13. doi: 10.1002/mnfr.201200439.


Rowland IR, Wiseman H, Sanders TA, Adlercreutz H, Bowey EA. (2000). Interindividual variation in metabolism of soy isoflavones and lignans: influence of habitual diet on equol production by the gut microflora. Nutr Cancer, 36(1):27-32.


Saji S, Hirose M, Toi M. (2005). Clinical significance of estrogen receptor beta in breast cancer. Cancer Chemother Pharmacol, 56(1):21-6.


Setchell KD, Brown NM, Summer S, et al. (2013). Dietary Factors Influence Production of the Soy Isoflavone Metabolite S-(-)Equol in Healthy Adults. J Nutr.


Shao ZM, Shen ZZ, Fontana JA, Barsky SH. (2000). Genistein's ER-dependent and independent actions are mediated through ER pathways in ER-positive breast carcinoma cell lines. Anti-cancer Res, 20(4):2409-16.


Stark A, Madar Z. (2002). Phytoestrogens: a review of recent findings. J Pediatr Endocrinol Metab, 15(5):561-72.


Tseng M, Byrne C, Kurzer MS, Fang CY. (2013). Equol-producing status, isoflavone intake, and breast density in a sample of u.s. Chinese women. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev, 22(11):1975-83. doi: 10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-13-0593.


Xin Z, Siji L, Yan D, Weijuan X, Jie S, Qianyu W. (2009). Influence of Genistein and Daidzein on estrogen-related receptor- α in an Endometrial Carcinoma Cell Line. Tong Ji Da Xue Xue Bao (Yi Xue Ban), 30(4): 12-17.


Xu J, Loo G. (2001). Different effects of genistein on molecular markers related to apoptosis in two phenotypically dissimilar breast cancer cell lines. Journal of Cellular Biochemistry, 82(1), 78-88.

Wang Z, Zhang Y, Banerjee S, Li Y, Sarkar FH. (2006) Inhibition of nuclear factor kappab activity by genistein is mediated via Notch-1 signaling pathway in pancreatic cancer cells. Int J Cancer. 2006 Apr 15;118(8):1930-6.

Artesunate, oral (See also Injectables)

Cancer:
Non-resectable tumors, Retinoblastoma, colon, esophageal., retinoblastoma, ovarian, lung, glioblastoma, MDR, gastric

Action: Anti-cancer

Artesunate is a semisynthetic derivative of the herbal anti-malaria drug artemisinin, which is the active agent from Artemisia annua L. used in traditional Chinese medicine.

Anti-cancer; Canine

The anti-malarial drug artesunate has shown anti-cancer activity in vitro and in preliminary animal experiments, but experience in patients with cancer is very limited. Preclinical studies in dogs indicated morbidity at high dosage levels. The effects of artesunate have been examined in canine cancer cell lines and in canine cancer patients. A safety/efficacy field study with artesunate was conducted in 23 dogs with non-resectable tumors.

Artesunate was administered for 7–385 days at a dosage of 651-1178 (median 922) mg/m(2). No neurological or cardiac toxicity was observed and seven dogs exhibited no adverse effects at all. Fever and haematological/gastrointestinal toxicity, mostly transient, occurred in 16 dogs. Plasma artesunate and DHA levels fell below the limit of detection within 8–12 hours after artesunate administration, while levels after two hours were close to 1 µM. Artesunate produced a long-lasting complete remission in one case of cancer and short-term stabilization of another 7 cases. This study suggests artesunate may be an effective anti-cancer agent in humans (Rutteman, 2013).

Lung Cancer

The exact molecular mechanism by which artesunate induces apoptosis in human lung adenocarcinoma (ASTC-a-1 and A549) cell lines has been examined, and it was found that artesunate induces apoptosis via a Bak-mediated caspase-independent intrinsic pathway in human lung adenocarcinoma cells. Artesunate treatment was found to induce ROS-mediated apoptosis in a concentration- and time-dependent fashion accompanying the loss of mitochondrial potential and subsequent release of Smac and AIF indicative of intrinsic apoptosis pathway. Furthermore, although ART treatment did not induce a significant down-regulation of voltage-dependent anion channel 2 (VDAC2) expression and up-regulation of Bim expression, silencing VDAC2 potently enhanced the artesunate-induced Bak activation and apoptosis which were significantly prevented by silencing Bim.

Collectively, our data firstly demonstrate that artesunate induces Bak-mediated caspase-independent intrinsic apoptosis in which Bim and VDAC2 as well as AIF play important roles in both ASTC-a-1 and A549 cell lines, indicating a potential therapeutic effect of artesunate for lung cancer (Zhou, 2012).

Glioblastoma

Trials that include artesunate in cancer therapy are ongoing due to its action as a powerful inducer of oxidative DNA damage, giving rise to formamidopyrimidine DNA glycosylase-sensitive sites and the formation of 8-oxoguanine and 1,N6-ethenoadenine. Oxidative DNA damage was induced in LN-229 human glioblastoma cells dose-dependently and was paralleled by cell death executed by apoptosis and necrosis, which could be attenuated by radical scavengers such as N-acetyl cysteine.

These data indicate that both homologous recombination and nonhomologous end joining are involved in the repair of artesunate-induced DNA double-strand break (DSB). Artesunate provoked a DNA damage response (DDR) with phosphorylation of ATM, ATR, Chk1, and Chk2.

Overall, these data revealed that artesunate induces oxidative DNA lesions and DSB that continuously increase during the treatment period and accumulate until they trigger discoidin domain receptors (DDR) and finally tumor cell death (Berdelle, 2011).

Esophageal Cancer, MDR

The Eca109/ABCG2 cell line was established by transfecting the ABCG2 gene into Eca109 cells. The Eca109/ABCG2 esophageal cancer cells with ABCG2 gene overexpression were resistant to adriamycin (ADM), daunorubicin (DNR) and mitoxantrone (MIT), which indicated that ABCG2 may be associated with drug resistance in esophageal cancer.

Artesunate (ART) exerted profound anti-cancer activity. The mechanism for the reversal of multi-drug resistance by Art in esophageal carcinoma was analyzed using cellular experiments (Liu, Zuo, & Guo, 2013).

Artesunate was found to stop the growth of esophageal cancer cells transplated subcutaneous tumors in nude mice in the G1 stage. It is hence thought that the role of Artesunate against esophageal carcinoma maybe relate to cell-cycle blockage. Artesunate was also found to increase the expression of SMAD3 and TGF-β1, and reduce the expression of CDC25A and CDC25B which may also play a role in its anti-cancer activity.

Retinoblastoma

Zhao et al. (2013) found that the cytotoxic action of artesunate (ART) is specific for Retinoblastoma (RB) cells in a dose-dependent manner, with low toxicity in normal retina cells. ART is more effective in RB than carboplatin with a markedly strong cytotoxic effect on carboplatin-resistant RB cells. RB had higher CD71 levels at the membrane compared to normal retinal cells. ART is a promising drug exhibiting high selective cytotoxicity even against multi-drug-resistant RB cells.

Gastric Cancer

Artesunate has concentration-dependent inhibitory activities against gastric cancer in vitro and in vivo by promoting cell oncosis through an impact of calcium, vascular endothelial growth factor, and calpain-2 expression (Zhou et al., 2013).

Ovarian Cancer

Advanced-stage ovarian cancer (OVCA) has a unifocal origin in the pelvis. Molecular pathways associated with extrapelvic OVCA spread are also associated with metastasis from other human cancers and with overall patient survival. Such pathways represent appealing therapeutic targets for patients with metastatic disease. Artesunate-induced TGF-WNT pathway inhibition impaired OVCA cell migration (Marchion et al., 2013).

Colon Cancer

After colon cancer SW620 cells were treated with different doses of Artemisunate, anchorage independence was studied in soft agar colony formation. Invasiveness was assessed by Boyden chamber, and the protein level of intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) was detected by Western blot assay. Artemisunate significantly inhibited both the invasiveness and anchorage independence in a dose-dependent manner. The protein level of ICAM-1 was down-regulated as relative to the control group.

Artemisunate could potentially inhibit invasion of the colon carcinoma cell line SW620 by down-regulating ICAM-1 expression (Fan, Zhang, Yao, & Li, 2008).

References

Berdelle N, Nikolova T, Quiros S, Efferth T, Kaina B. (2011). Artesunate Induces Oxidative DNA Damage, Sustained DNA Double-Strand Breaks, and the ATM/ATR Damage Response in Cancer Cells. Mol Cancer Ther, 10(12):2224-33. doi: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-11-0534.


Fan, Y, Zhang, YL, Yao, GT, & Li, YK. (2008). Inhibition of Artemisunate on the invasion of human colon cancer line SW620. Lishizzhen Medicine and Materia Medica Research, 19(7), 1740-1741.


Liu, L, Zuo, LF, Guo, JW. (2013). Reversal of Multi-drug resistance by the anti-malaria drug artesunate in the esophageal cancer Eca109/ABCG2 cell line. Oncol Lett, 6(5): 1475–1481. doi: 10.3892/ol.2013.1545i


Marchion DC, Xiong Y, Chon HS, et al. (2013). Gene expression data reveal common pathways that characterize the unifocal nature of ovarian cancer. Am J Obstet Gynecol, S0002-9378(13)00827-2. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2013.08.004.


Rutteman GR, Erich SA, Mol JA, et al. (2013). Safety and Efficacy Field Study of Artesunate for Dogs with Non-resectable Tumors. Anti-cancer Res, 33(5):1819-27.


Zhao F, Wang H, Kunda P, et al. (2013). Artesunate exerts specific cytotoxicity in retinoblastoma cells via CD71. Oncol Rep. doi: 10.3892/or.2013.2574.


Zhou C, Pan W, Wang XP, Chen TS. (2012). Artesunate induces apoptosis via a Bak-mediated caspase-independent intrinsic pathway in human lung adenocarcinoma cells. J Cell Physiol, 227(12):3778-86. doi: 10.1002/jcp.24086.


Zhou X, Sun WJ, Wang WM, et al. (2013). Artesunate inhibits the growth of gastric cancer cells through the mechanism of promoting oncosis both in vitro and in vivo. Anti-cancer Drugs, 24(9):920-7. doi: 10.1097/CAD.0b013e328364a109.

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.

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).

Screen-Shot-2014-03-28-at-11.53.41-am1

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.



Bae EA, Han MJ, Choo MK et al. (2002). Metabolism of 20(S)- and 20(R)-ginsenoside R-g3 by human intestinal bacteria and its relation to in vitro biological activities. Biol. Pharm. Bull, 25:58–63.


Cai S, Zhou Y, Liu J, et al. (2012). Experimental study on human leukemia cell line K562 senescence induced by ginsenoside Rg1. Zhongguo Zhong Yao Za Zhi, 37(16):2424-8.


Cao M, Yu HS, Song XB, Ma BP. (2012) Advances in the study of derivatization of ginsenosides and their anti-tumor structure-activity relationship. Yao Xue Xue Bao, 47(7):836-43.


Chang TKH, Chen J, Benetton SA et al. (2002). In vitro effect of standardized ginseng extracts and individual ginsenosides on the catalytic activity of human CYP1A1, CYP1A2, and CYP1B1. Drug Metab. Dispos, 30:378–384.


Chen Y, Xu Y, Zhu Y, Li X. (2013). Anti-cancer effects of ginsenoside compound k on pediatric acute myeloid leukemia cells. Cancer Cell Int, 13(1):24. doi: 10.1186/1475-2867-13-24.


Choi YJ, Lee HJ, Kang DW, et al. (2013). Ginsenoside Rg3 induces apoptosis in the U87MG human glioblastoma cell line through the MEK signaling pathway and reactive oxygen species. Oncol Rep, 30(3): 1362-1370. doi: 10.3892/or.2013.2555.


Christensen LP. (2009). Ginsenosides chemistry, biosynthesis, analysis, and potential health effects. Adv Food Nutr Res., 55:1-99. doi: 10.1016/S1043-4526(08)00401-4.


Chung KS, Cho SH, Shin JS, et al. (2013). Ginsenoside Rh2 induces Cell-cycle arrest and differentiation in human leukemia cells by upregulating TGF- β expression. Carcinogenesis, 34(2):331-40. doi: 10.1093/carcin/bgs341.


Du GJ, Wang CZ, Zhang ZY, et al. (2012) Caspase-mediated pro-apoptotic interaction of panaxadiol and irinotecan in human colorectal cancer cells. J Pharm Pharmacol, 64(5):727-34. doi: 10.1111/j.2042-7158.2012.01463.x.


Du GJ, Wang CZ, Qi LW, et al. (2013). The synergistic apoptotic interaction of panaxadiol and epigallocatechin gallate in human colorectal cancer cells. Phytother Res, 27(2):272-7. doi: 10.1002/ptr.4707.


Henderson GL, Harkey MR, Gershwin, ME, et al. (1999). Effects of ginseng components on c-DNA-expressed cytochrome P450 enzyme catalytic activity. Life Sci, PL209–PL214.


Jeong YM, Oh WK, Tran TL, et al. (2013). Aglycone of Rh4 inhibits melanin synthesis in B16 melanoma cells: possible involvement of the protein kinase A pathway. Biosci Biotechnol Biochem, 77(1):119-25.


Ji Y, Rao Z, Cui J, et al. (2012). Ginsenosides extracted from nanoscale Chinese white ginseng enhances anti-cancer effect. J Nanosci Nanotechnol, 12(8):6163-7.


Jia WW, Bu X, Philips D, et al. (2004). Rh2, a compound extracted from ginseng, hypersensitizes Multi-drug-resistant tumor cells to chemotherapy. Can J Physiol Pharmacol, 82(7):431-7.


Jia JM, Wang ZQ, Wu LJ, Wu YL. (2008). Advance of pharmacological study on ginsenoside Rb1. Zhongguo Zhong Yao Za Zhi, 33(12):1371-7.


Kim YJ, Yamabe N, Choi P, et al. (2013a) Efficient Thermal Deglycosylation of Ginsenoside Rd and Its Contribution to the Improved Anti-cancer Activity of Ginseng. J Agric Food Chem.


Kim AD, Kang KA, Kim HS, et al. (2013b). A ginseng metabolite, compound K, induces autophagy and apoptosis via generation of reactive oxygen species and activation of JNK in human colon cancer cells. Cell Death Dis, 4:e750. doi: 10.1038/cddis.2013.273.


Kim SM, Lee SY, Cho JS, et al. (2010). Combination of ginsenoside Rg3 with docetaxel enhances the susceptibility of prostate cancer cells via inhibition of NF-kappaB. Eur J Pharmacol, 631(1-3):1-9. doi: 10.1016/j.ejphar.2009.12.018.


Kim SM, Lee SY, Yuk DY, et al. (2009). Inhibition of NF-kappaB by ginsenoside Rg3 enhances the susceptibility of colon cancer cells to docetaxel. Arch Pharm Res, 32:755–765. doi: 10.1007/s12272-009-1515-4.


King ML, Adler SR, Murphy LL. (2006). Extraction-dependent effects of American ginseng (Panax quinquefolium) on human breast cancer cell proliferation and estrogen receptor activation. Integr Cancer Ther, 5(3):236-43.


Kwon HY, Kim EH, Kim SW, et al. (2008). Selective toxicity of ginsenoside Rg3 on Multi-drug-resistant cells by membrane fluidity modulation. Arch Pharm Res, 31(2):171-7.


Lee IA, Hyam SR, Jang SE, Han MJ, Kim DH. (2012). Ginsenoside Re ameliorates inflammation by inhibiting the binding of lipopolysaccharide to TLR4 on macrophages. J Agric Food Chem, 60(38):9595-602.


Li XL, Wang CZ, Mehendale SR, et al. (2009). Panaxadiol, a purified ginseng component, enhances the anti-cancer effects of 5-fluorouracil in human colorectal cancer cells. Cancer Chemother Pharmacol, 64(6):1097-104. doi: 10.1007/s00280-009-0966-0.


Mehendale S, Aung H, Wang A, et al. (2005). American ginseng berry extract and ginsenoside Re attenuate cisplatin-induced kaolin intake in rats. Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology, 56(1):63-9. doi: 10.1007/s00280-004-0956-1.


Nguyen TD, Villard PH, Barlatier A et al. (2000). Panax vietnamensis protects mice against carbon tetrachloride-induced hepatotoxicity without any modification of CYP2E1 gene expression. Planta Med, 66:714–719.


Pan J, Zhang Q, Li K, et al. (2013). Chemoprevention of lung squamous cell carcinoma by ginseng. Cancer Prev Res (Phila), 6(6):530-9. doi: 10.1158/1940-6207.CAPR-12-0366.


Park MT, Cha HJ, Jeong JW, et al. (1999). Glucocorticoid receptor-induced down-regulation of MMP-9 by ginseng components, PD and PT contributes to inhibition of the invasive capacity of HT1080 human fibrosarcoma cells. Mol Cells, 9(5):476-83.


Wang CZ and Yuan CS. (2008). Potential Role of Ginseng in the Treatment of Colorectal Cancer. Am. J. Chin. Med, 36:1019. doi: 10.1142/S0192415X08006545


Wang Z, Zheng Q, Liu K, Li G, Zheng R. (2006). Ginsenoside Rh(2) enhances anti-tumor activity and decreases genotoxic effect of cyclophosphamide. Basic Clin Pharmacol Toxicol, 98(4):411-5.


Wang CZ, Zhang B, Song WX, et al. (2006). Steamed American ginseng berry: ginsenoside analyzes and anti-cancer activities. Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, 54(26):9936-42.


Yun UJ, Lee JH, Koo KH, et al. (2013). Lipid raft modulation by Rp1 reverses Multi-drug resistance via inactivating MDR-1 and Src inhibition. Biochem Pharmacol, 85(10):1441-53. doi: 10.1016/j.bcp.2013.02.025.


Zhang LH, Jia YL, Lin XX, et al. (2013). AD-1, a novel ginsenoside derivative, shows anti-lung cancer activity via activation of p38 MAPK pathway and generation of reactive oxygen species. Biochim Biophys Acta, 1830(8):4148-59. doi: 10.1016/j.bbagen.2013.04.008.


Zhou Sf, Gao Yh, Jiang Wq et al. (2003) Interactions of Herbs with Cytochrome P450. DRUG METABOLISM REVIEWS, 35(1):35–98.