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Boswellic
acids and malignant glioma: induction of apoptosis but no modulation of drug
sensitivity
Glaser
T, Winter S, Groscurth P, Safayhi H, Sailer ER, Ammon HP, Schabet M, Weller M
Department
of Neurology, University of Tubingen, Germany
Steroids
are essential for the control of oedema in human malignant glioma patients but
may interfere with the efficacy of chemotherapy.
Boswellic acids are phytotherapeutic anti-inflammatory agents that may be
alternative drugs to corticosteroids in the treatment of cerebral oedema.
Here, we report that boswellic acids are cytotoxic to malignant glioma cells at
low micromolar concentrations.
In-situ DNA end labelling and electron microscopy reveal that boswellic acids
induce apoptosis.
Boswellic acid-induced apoptosis requires protein, but not RNA synthesis, and is
neither associated with free radical formation nor blocked by free radical
scavengers.
The levels of BAX and BCL-2 proteins remain unaltered during boswellic
acid-induced apoptosis.
p21 expression is induced by boswellic acids via a p53-independent pathway.
Ectopic expression of wild-type p53 also induces p21, and facilitates boswellic
acid-induced apoptosis.
However, targeted disruption of the p21 genes in colon carcinoma cells enhances
rather than decreases boswellic acid toxicity.
Ectopic expression of neither BCL-2 nor the caspase inhibitor, CRM-A, is
protective.
In contrast to steroids, subtoxic concentrations of boswellic acids do not
interfere with cancer drug toxicity of glioma cells in acute cytotoxicity or
clonogenic cell death assays.
Also, in contrast to steroids, boswellic acids synergize with the cytotoxic
cytokine, CD95 ligand, in inducing glioma cell apoptosis.
This effect is probably mediated by inhibition of RNA synthesis and is not
associated with changes of CD95 expression at the cell surface.
Further studies in laboratory animals and in human patients are required to
determine whether boswellic acids may be a useful adjunct to the medical
management of human malignant glioma.
PMID:
10360653 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Source:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=10360653&dopt=Abstract
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