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Dietary
feeding of silibinin inhibits advanced human prostate carcinoma growth in
athymic nude mice and increases plasma insulin-like growth factor-binding
protein-3 levels
Singh RP, Dhanalakshmi S, Tyagi AK, Chan DC, Agarwal C, Agarwal R
Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, School of Pharmacy,
University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, 4200 East Ninth Street, Denver,
CO 80262, USA
We have reported recently the anticancer effect of flavonoid antioxidant
silymarin, the major part of milk thistle extract, against advanced human
prostate carcinoma DU145 cells (X. Zi et al., Cancer Res., 58: 1920-1929, 1998)
and later identified that silibinin is the main active component in silymarin
responsible for its effect in cell culture studies.
On the basis of these observations, here we assessed in vivo growth inhibitory
potential of silibinin against advanced human prostate cancer (PCA).
Dietary feeding of silibinin at 0.05 and 0.1% doses (w/w) for 60 days, 24 h
after s.c. DU145 tumor xenograft implantation in athymic male nude mice,
significantly inhibited tumor volume by 35 and 58% (P < 0.05), and wet weight
of tumor by 29 and 40% (P < 0.05), respectively.
In a second experiment where mice were fed with these test diets for 3 weeks
before tumor xenograft implantation and continued on these diets for a total of
63 days, tumor volume and wet weight of tumor were reduced by 53-64% (P <
0.001-0.05) and 31-52% (P < 0.05), respectively.
In both studies, animals did not show weight loss or reduced food
consumption.
These in vivo anticancer effects of silibinin were associated with an increased
accumulation (up to 5.8 fold; P < 0.05) of human insulin-like growth
factor-binding protein-3 in mouse plasma.
In additional studies assessing biological availability of silibinin in nude
mice and its antiproliferative activity at such doses in DU145 cells in culture,
silibinin levels in plasma and prostate were found to be in the range of 7-13
microg/ml and 3.7-4.6 microg/g, respectively.
At these biologically achievable silibinin concentrations, increased IGFBP-3
level in DU145 cell culture medium and a strong DU145 cell growth inhibition
were observed that were irreversible in the absence of silibinin in culture
medium.
These findings extend and translate our observations on in vitro anticancer
effect of silibinin/silymarin to an in vivo preclinical PCA model, which may
form the basis for a Phase I clinical trial in PCA patients.
PMID: 12036915 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Source: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=12036915&dopt=Abstract
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