Combined Curcumin and Luteolin Synergistically Inhibit Colon Cancer Associated with Notch1 and TGF-β Signaling Pathways in Cultured Cells and Xenograft Mice

被引:16
作者
Aromokeye, Rukayat [1 ]
Si, Hongwei [1 ]
机构
[1] Tennessee State Univ, Dept Human Sci, Nashville, TN 37209 USA
基金
美国食品与农业研究所;
关键词
synergistic; colon cancer; luteolin; curcumin; combination; notch1; TGF-beta-signaling pathways; kinases; xenograft mice; GROWTH; RESVERATROL; COMBINATION; ABSORPTION; ERK;
D O I
10.3390/cancers14123001
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Simple Summary: One of the significant issues of the anti-cancer effects of phytochemicals, bioactive compounds from foods, and other plants, is that the effective dosages of the phytochemicals are too high to be obtained by oral intake, particularly by food intake. The current study aimed to assess if the combination of two phytochemicals, luteolin (LUT) and curcumin (CUR), at low dosages where LUT or CUR alone has no significant effect, synergistically exerts anti-colon cancer. Our results show that combined LUT and CUR synergistically suppressed colon cancer in cultured cells and cell-derived xenograft mice, which may be associated with two possible molecular pathways. This study provides a practical approach to treating or preventing colon cancer in humans by consuming foods having high levels of luteolin and curcumin. This study aimed to select a combination of curcumin and luteolin, two phytochemicals from food, at lower concentrations with a higher inhibitory effect on colon cancer growth and investigate possible molecular mechanisms of this anti-colon cancer effect. By pairwise combination screening, we identified that the combination of curcumin (CUR) at 15 mu M and luteolin (LUT) at 30 mu M (C15L30) synergistically suppressed the proliferation of human colon cancer CL-188 cells, but the individual chemicals had a little inhibitory effect at the selected concentrations. This result was also confirmed in other colon cancer DLD-1cells, suggesting that this synergistic inhibitory effect of C15L30 applies to different colon cancer cells. The combination C15L30 synergistically suppressed the wound closure (wound healing assay) in CL-188 cells. We also found that the combination of CUR and LUT (at 20 mg/kg/day and 10 mg/kg/day, respectively, IP injection, 5 days for 2 weeks) synergistically suppressed tumor growth in CL-188 cell-derived xenograft mice. Western blot results showed that protein levels of Notch1 and TGF-beta were synergistically reduced by the combination, both in CL-188 cells and xenograft tumors. Tumor pathological analysis revealed that combined CUR and LUT synergistically increased necrosis, but the individual treatment with CUR and LUT had no significant effect on tumor necrosis. Therefore, combined curcumin and luteolin synergically inhibit colon cancer development by suppressing cell proliferation, necrosis, and migration associated with Notch1 and TGF-beta pathways. This study provides evidence that colon cancer may be prevented/treated by consuming foods having high levels of luteolin and curcumin in humans.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 42 条
  • [1] Epigenetic and genetic features of 24 colon cancer cell lines
    Ahmed, D.
    Eide, P. W.
    Eilertsen, I. A.
    Danielsen, S. A.
    Eknaes, M.
    Hektoen, M.
    Lind, G. E.
    Lothe, R. A.
    [J]. ONCOGENESIS, 2013, 2 : e71 - e71
  • [2] A NOTCH1 gene copy number gain is a prognostic indicator of worse survival and a predictive biomarker to a Notch1 targeting antibody in colorectal cancer
    Arcaroli, John J.
    Tai, W. M.
    McWilliams, Ryan
    Bagby, Stacey
    Blatchford, Patrick J.
    Varella-Garcia, Marileila
    Purkey, Alicia
    Quackenbush, Kevin S.
    Song, Eun-Kee
    Pitts, Todd M.
    Gao, Dexiang
    Lieu, Chris
    McManus, Martine
    Tan, Aik Choon
    Zheng, Xianxian
    Zhang, Qin
    Ozeck, Mark
    Olson, Peter
    Jiang, Zhi-Qin
    Kopetz, Scott
    Jimeno, Antonio
    Keysar, Stephen
    Eckhardt, Gail
    Messersmith, Wells A.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER, 2016, 138 (01) : 195 - 205
  • [3] Bhagwat S., 2015, USDA DATABASE FLAVON
  • [4] Curcumin- and Piperine-Loaded Emulsomes as Combinational Treatment Approach Enhance the Anticancer Activity of Curcumin on HCT116 Colorectal Cancer Model
    Bolat, Zeynep Busra
    Islek, Zeynep
    Demir, Bilun Nas
    Yilmaz, Elif Nur
    Sahin, Fikrettin
    Ucisik, Mehmet Hikmet
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN BIOENGINEERING AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, 2020, 8
  • [5] Drug Combination Studies and Their Synergy Quantification Using the Chou-Talalay Method
    Chou, Ting-Chao
    [J]. CANCER RESEARCH, 2010, 70 (02) : 440 - 446
  • [6] Human studies on the absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion of tea polyphenols
    Clifford, Michael N.
    van der Hooft, Justin J. J.
    Crozier, Alan
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NUTRITION, 2013, 98 (06) : 1619S - 1630S
  • [7] Rap2B promotes proliferation, migration, and invasion of human breast cancer through calcium-related ERK1/2 signaling pathway
    Di, Jiehui
    Huang, Hui
    Qu, Debao
    Tang, Juangjuan
    Cao, Wenjia
    Lu, Zheng
    Cheng, Qian
    Yang, Jing
    Bai, Jin
    Zhang, Yanping
    Zheng, Junnian
    [J]. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2015, 5
  • [8] Gold LI, 1999, CRIT REV ONCOGENESIS, V10, P303
  • [9] Hematoxylin and Eosin Counterstaining Protocol for Immunohistochemistry Interpretation and Diagnosis
    Grosset, Andree-Anne
    Loayza-Vega, Kevin
    Adam-Granger, Eloise
    Birlea, Mirela
    Gilks, Blake
    Nguyen, Bich
    Soucy, Genevieve
    Danh Tran-Thanh
    Albadine, Roula
    Trudel, Dominique
    [J]. APPLIED IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR MORPHOLOGY, 2019, 27 (07) : 558 - 563
  • [10] Free Radicals as a Double-Edged Sword: The Cancer Preventive and Therapeutic Roles of Curcumin
    Gupta, Nehal
    Verma, Kshitij
    Nalla, Sarath
    Kulshreshtha, Alok
    Lall, Rajiv
    Prasad, Sahdeo
    [J]. MOLECULES, 2020, 25 (22):