In:
International Journal of Cancer, Wiley, Vol. 125, No. 9 ( 2009-11), p. 2187-2197
Abstract:
Because of the poor prognosis and the development of resistance against chemotherapeutic drugs, the current treatment for advanced metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC) is ineffective. Whether curcumin (a component of turmeric) can potentiate the effect of capecitabine against growth and metastasis of CRC was investigated. The effect of curcumin on proliferation of CRC cell lines was examined by mitochondrial dye‐uptake assay, apoptosis by esterase staining, nuclear factor‐kappaB (NF‐κB) by electrophoretic mobility shift assay and gene expression by Western blot analysis. The effect of curcumin on the growth and metastasis of CRC was also examined in orthotopically implanted tumors in nude mice. In vitro , curcumin inhibited the proliferation of human CRC cell lines, potentiated capecitabine‐induced apoptosis, inhibited NF‐κB activation and suppressed NF‐κB‐regulated gene products. In nude mice, the combination of curcumin and capecitabine was found to be more effective than either agent alone in reducing tumor volume ( p = 0.001 vs . control; p = 0.031 vs . capecitabine alone), Ki‐67 proliferation index ( p = 0.001 vs . control) and microvessel density marker CD31. The combination treatment was also highly effective in suppressing ascites and distant metastasis to the liver, intestines, lungs, rectum and spleen. This effect was accompanied by suppressed expression of activated NF‐κB and NF‐κB‐regulated gene products (cyclin D1,c‐myc, bcl‐2, bcl‐xL, cIAP‐1, COX‐2, ICAM‐1, MMP‐9, CXCR4 and VEGF). Overall, our results suggest that curcumin sensitizes CRC to the antitumor and antimetastatic effects of capecitabine by suppressing NF‐κB cell signaling pathway. © 2009 UICC
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
ISSN:
0020-7136
,
1097-0215
Language:
English
Publisher:
Wiley
Publication Date:
2009
detail.hit.zdb_id:
218257-9
detail.hit.zdb_id:
1474822-8