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Carnosic
acid potentiates the antioxidant and prodifferentiation effects of
1alpha,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 in leukemia cells but does not promote elevation
of basal levels of intracellular calcium
Danilenko M, Wang Q, Wang X, Levy J, Sharoni Y, Studzinski GP
Department of Clinical Biochemistry, Faculty of Health Sciences,
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, 84105, Israel
Differentiation therapy of cancer remains an only partially attained goal.
Agents currently under active investigation include derivatives of vitamin D,
modeled on its physiological hormone form, 1alpha,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3)
(1,25D(3)), but the calcemic effects of these compounds preclude their use in
the clinic.
An approach that may obviate this problem is to combine 1,25D(3) or its
derivatives with other agents that increase the antineoplastic effects of low,
nontoxic concentrations of vitamin D compounds.
We have recently used the plant-derived polyphenolic antioxidant, carnosic acid
(CA), to demonstrate an increase in the differentiating action of 1,25D(3) on
human leukemia cells under these conditions (M. Danilenko et al., JNCI, 93:
1224-1233, 2001).
We now show that treatment of HL60-G cells with either CA or 1,25D(3) alone
resulted in a decrease in the intracellular levels of reactive oxygen
species.
Furthermore, the combination of 10 micro M CA and a low concentration of
1,25D(3) (1 nM) produced an enhanced antioxidant effect, which correlated with
the potentiation of monocytic differentiation.
Other plant antioxidants tested (curcumin, silibinin, and the organoselenium
antioxidant ebselen) also potentiated differentiation induced by 1,25D(3),
although alone, they had only minor differentiating effects.
Differentiation induced by CA/1,25D(3) combinations was associated with
increased intracellular glutathione content, whereas buthionine sulfoxime
decreased both differentiation and the cellular glutathione content.
This combination also enhanced the activation of the Raf-mitogen-activated
protein/extracellular signal-regulated kinase kinase-extracellular
signal-regulated kinase mitogen-activated protein kinase module and increased
the binding of the activator protein-1 (AP-1) transcription factor to its
cognate DNA element in the promoter regions of vitamin D receptor gene,
suggesting that the mechanism of potentiation is at least in part attributable
to induction and activation of components of this mitogen-activated protein
kinase pathway.
Cell treatment with a high concentration of 1,25D(3) (100 nM) resulted in a
substantial elevation of basal intracellular calcium concentration.
In contrast, importantly for an eventual clinical application of these studies,
the potentiating action of CA on differentiation induced by a low concentration
of 1,25D(3) (1 nM) was not accompanied by an elevation of basal intracellular
calcium concentration.
These findings suggest that combinations of CA with derivatives of vitamin D
should be evaluated for use in differentiation therapy of myeloid leukemias.
PMID: 12649194 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Source: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=12649194&dopt=Abstract
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