Tsing-Fen Ho1, Chia-Che Chang2,3,4,5. 1. Department of Medical Laboratory Science and Biotechnology, Central Taiwan University of Science and Technology, 406, Taichung, Taiwan. 2. Institute of Biomedical Sciences, National Chung Hsing University, No. 250, Kuo-Kuang Road, 402, Taichung, Taiwan. chia_che@dragon.nchu.edu.tw. 3. Agricultural Biotechnology Center, National Chung Hsing University, 402, Taichung, Taiwan. chia_che@dragon.nchu.edu.tw. 4. Ph.D. Program in Translational Medicine, National Chung Hsing University, 402, Taichung, Taiwan. chia_che@dragon.nchu.edu.tw. 5. Rong Hsing Research Center for Translational Medicine, National Chung Hsing University, 402, Taichung, Taiwan. chia_che@dragon.nchu.edu.tw.
Abstract
An ideal cancer therapy specifically targets cancer cells while sparing normal tissues. Tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) elicits apoptosis by engaging its cognate death receptors (DRs-namely, DR4 and DR5. The cancer cell-selective proapoptotic action of TRAIL is highly attractive for cancer therapy, but clinical application of TRAIL is rather limited due to tumors' inherent or acquired TRAIL resistance. Combining TRAIL with agents that reverse resistance to it has proved promising in the sensitization of TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Noteworthy, natural compounds have already been validated as potential resources for TRAIL sensitizers. In this review, we focus on the recently identified TRAILsensitizing effect of tanshinones, the anticancer ingredients of the medicinal plant Salvia miltiorrhiza (Danshen in Chinese). Research from our laboratories and others have revealed the synergy of a tanshinones-TRAIL combination in diverse types of cancer cells through up-regulation of DR5 and/or down-regulation of antiapoptotic proteins such as survivin. Thus, in addition to their anticancer mechanisms, tanshinones as TRAIL sensitizers hold great potential to be translated to TRAIL-based therapeutic modalities for combatting cancer.
An ideal cancer therapy specifically targets cancer cells while sparing normal tissues. Tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) elicits apoptosis by engaging its cognate death receptors (DRs-namely, DR4 and DR5. The cancer cell-selective proapoptotic action of TRAIL is highly attractive for cancer therapy, but clinical application of TRAIL is rather limited due to tumors' inherent or acquired TRAIL resistance. Combining TRAIL with agents that reverse resistance to it has proved promising in the sensitization of TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Noteworthy, natural compounds have already been validated as potential resources for TRAIL sensitizers. In this review, we focus on the recently identified TRAILsensitizing effect of tanshinones, the anticancer ingredients of the medicinal plant Salvia miltiorrhiza (Danshen in Chinese). Research from our laboratories and others have revealed the synergy of a tanshinones-TRAIL combination in diverse types of cancer cells through up-regulation of DR5 and/or down-regulation of antiapoptotic proteins such as survivin. Thus, in addition to their anticancer mechanisms, tanshinones as TRAIL sensitizers hold great potential to be translated to TRAIL-based therapeutic modalities for combatting cancer.
Entities:
Keywords:
Apoptosis; Cancer therapy; Danshen; TRAIL; Tanshinones
Cancer remains the leading cause of mortality globally. Despite advances in
developing new therapeutic modalities for cancer, chemotherapy is still the
fundamental tool for cancer treatment primarily through induction of apoptosis in
cancer cells. Natural compounds isolated from medicinal plants have been seen as
promising resources for novel chemotherapeutic drug discovery [1-3].
In this review, we summarize the anticancer potential of tanshinones, the bioactive
components isolated from the dried root of the medicinal plant Salvia miltiorrhiza Bunge (Lamiaceae) (a.k.a. Danshen)
(Figure 1) that has been frequently used in
traditional Chinese medicine for over a thousand years to prevent or treat various
conditions including menstrual disorders, hepatitis, and cardiovascular diseases
[4, 5]. In particular, we focus on the recently discovered role of
tanshinones as sensitizing agents of tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-related
apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL), which has an attractive anticancer potential due
to its cancer cell-selective proapoptotic action but is often limited by the
development of TRAIL-resistance in many humantumors. The mechanisms whereby
tanshinones overcome TRAIL resistance and the potential translation of tanshinones
to TRAIL-based cancer remedies are also discussed herein.
Fig. 1
Photographs of Salvia
miltiorrhiza Bunge (Lamiaceae). (A) Propagated plants of
Salvia miltiorrhiza; (B) The aerial
and root parts of harvested Salvia
miltiorrhiza.
2. Tanshinones
2.1. Tanshinones are the anticancer components of Danshen
In general, the bioactive components of Danshen can be categorized into two
groups, namely, the lipophilic diterpene quinones and the water-soluble phenolic
acids like salvianolic acids [6]. The
lipophilic group, composed of more than 50 diterpenoid tanshinones, shows
prominent anticancer potential in addition to showing anti-inflammatory and
antioxidant activities [7].
Cryptotanshinone, tanshinone I, and tanshinone IIA are the three major elements of
the lipophilic group (Figure 2), and
numerous in vitro and in vivo studies have revealed the anticancer actions as well as the
underlying mechanisms of these main tanshinones (Figure 3).
Fig. 2
The chemical structure of the main tanshinones of Danshen.
Tanshinone I (left); Tanshinone IIA (center); and Crytotanshinone
(right).
Fig. 3
Anticancer mechanisms of action of tanshinones. Reported
anticancer actions of tanshinones include: (1) inhibition of
proliferation through arresting cell cycle progression, (2) induction of
cancer cell apoptotic death, (3) anti-metastasis, (4) anti-angiogenesis,
and (5) induction of cancer cell differentiation. Please refer to text
for details.
2.2. Anticancer modes of action of tanshinones
2.2.1. Induction of cell cycle arrest
Tanshinones induce the arrest of cancer cell cycle progression at the G1, S,
or G2/M phases in a cell type-dependent manner, leading to the inhibition of
cell proliferation [8-12]. Mechanistically, tanshinone I has been
shown to induce G1 arrest in lung cancer cells through the activation of the
p53/p21/p27 pathway [13].
Cryptotanshinone and its synthetic derivatives as well as tanshinone IIA have
all been observed to markedly repress prostate cancer cell growth in vitro and in
vivo and to trigger G1 arrest by blocking the actions of the
androgen receptor [11, 14-16].Photographs of Salvia
miltiorrhiza Bunge (Lamiaceae). (A) Propagated plants of
Salvia miltiorrhiza; (B) The aerial
and root parts of harvested Salvia
miltiorrhiza.The chemical structure of the main tanshinones of Danshen.
Tanshinone I (left); Tanshinone IIA (center); and Crytotanshinone
(right).
2.2.2. Induction of cell death
The proapoptotic effects of all of the main tanshinones have been tested and
validated in a broad range of cancer cell lines, primarily through engaging the
mitochondrial apoptosis pathway. Of note, all three main tanshinones have
suppressed the activation of prosurvival STAT3 to provoke apoptotic cell death
[17-20]. Furthermore, dependent on the type of
tanshinones, additional prosurvival mechanisms have been found to be targeted
for suppression, including PI3K/AKT [21, 22], survivin
[23], Erb-2 [24], Aurora A [25], MCL-1, and c-IAP2 [26]. In contrast, activation of JNK [27], p53 [11], and endoplasmic reticulum stress have been reported to
mediate tanshinones’ proapoptotic action [28, 29].
Intriguingly, the induction of autophagic cell death is something that
contributes to the anti-leukemia effect of tanshinone IIA [30].Anticancer mechanisms of action of tanshinones. Reported
anticancer actions of tanshinones include: (1) inhibition of
proliferation through arresting cell cycle progression, (2) induction of
cancer cell apoptotic death, (3) anti-metastasis, (4) anti-angiogenesis,
and (5) induction of cancer cell differentiation. Please refer to text
for details.
2.2.3. Anti-metastasis
The anti-metastasis effect of tanshinone I has been clearly validated in
xenograft models of the breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-231 [31] and the lung adenocarcinoma cell line
CL1-5 [32], and has also been
established in a transgenic lung cancer model driven by overexpression of the
humanvascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-A165
variant [13]. Additionally,
tanshinone IIA inhibited the metastasis of xenografted hepatocellular carcinoma
cell line HepG2, likely through the inhibition of the activities of matrix
metallopeptidases 2 and 9 [33].
2.2.4. Anti-angiogenesis
All of the main tanshinones demonstrate an anti-angiogenic effect at the
in vitro and in
vivo levels, as evidenced by reduced migration/proliferation/tube
formation of vascular endothelial cells and neovascularization of the chick
chorioallantoic membrane, respectively [18, 34,
35]. Tanshinone IIA has also been
shown to repress angiogenesis in mice xenografted with MDA-MB-231 cells
[36]. It appears that tanshinones
elicit anti-angiogenesis mainly through the down-regulation of hypoxia-induced
factor 1α (HIFα) and the consequent reduction in VEGF using distinct mechanisms.
Tanshinone I lowered HIFα levels by promoting the proteasomal degradation of
HIFα [18], whereas tanshinone IIA
attenuated HIFα translation by suppressing the mTOR-p70S6K- 4E-BP1 signaling
pathway [36].
2.2.5. Induction of cancer cell differentiation
All-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) is an
effective chemotherapeutic for acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) that works by
inducing APL cell differentiation, but resistance to ATRA does eventually
develop. Notably, tanshinone IIA has effectively induced APL cell
differentiation in both ATRA-sensitive and –resistant cell lines, likely through
inducing CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein β (C/EBPβ)-mediated differentiation
[37].
3. TRAIL
3.1. TRAIL-induced apoptosis
TRAIL is a type II membrane protein belonging to the TNF death ligand
superfamily, which also includes TNFα and Fas ligand (FasL/CD95L) [38]. TRAIL is unique in its ability to induce
p53- independent apoptosis selectively in cancer cells while sparing normal cells,
thus avoiding the adverse side effects frequently associated with current
chemotherapeutic agents. TRAIL induces apoptosis primarily through the death
receptors (DRs)-mediated apoptotic pathway (Figure 4). Four membrane-bound TRAIL receptors, including DR4
(TRAIL-R1), DR5 (TRAIL-R2), decoy receptor 1 (DcR1/TRAIL-R3) and DcR2 (TRAIL-R4),
and one soluble receptor osteoprotegerin (OPG) share highly homologous
extracellular TRAIL-binding domain. Both DR4 and DR5 are functional TRAIL
receptors that carry the cytoplasmic death domain (DD) to transduce
TRAIL-initiated apoptotic signals, whereas DcR1, DcR2 and OPG lack the cytoplasmic
DD and therefore antagonize TRAIL’s proapoptotic action. The binding of TRAIL to
DR4 or DR5 induces receptor trimerization and consequently clusters the
cytoplasmic DDs to recruit Fas-associated death domain (FADD) and pro-caspases 8
and 10 for the assembly of death-inducing signaling complex (DISC), leading to
selfcleavage and thus activation of pro-caspases 8/10. Activated caspases 8/10 in
turn initiate downstream caspase cascade to execute apoptosis program and, in
certain types of cells, also evoke the mitochondrial apoptosis pathway through the
truncation of the BH3-only protein BID (tBID) for the efficient induction of
apoptosis [39].
Fig. 4
TRAIL-induced apoptosis signaling pathway. TRAIL initiates
apoptosis through binding to DR4 and/or DR5. TRAIL binding induces
receptor trimerization to promote the assembly of DISC (composed of FADD
and procaspases 8/10) to induce self-cleavage and thus activation of
caspases 8/10, which in turn trigger downstream caspase cascade to execute
apoptosis program. In certain cell types, activated caspase 8 cleaves BID
to generate truncated BID (tBID), which in turn triggers the mitochondrial
apoptosis pathway. c-FLIP competes with procaspase 8 for recruitment to
DISC, thereby suppressing activation of procaspase 8 and thus dampening
TRAIL-initiated apoptosis stimuli. Antiapoptotic BCL-2 family members
BCL-2, BCL-xL, and MCL-1 suppress the activation of the mitochondrial
apoptosis pathway to blunt TRAIL-induced apoptosis. IAP proteins survivin
and XIAP induce TRAIL resistance via
the blockade of the activity of executioner caspases.
3.2. TRAIL-based cancer therapy
The ability to induce cancer cell-selective apoptosis makes TRAIL an
attractive choice for cancer therapy. Indeed, preclinical trials using soluble
forms of recombinant TRAIL have shown a promising tumoricidal effect and, unlike
TNFα and CD95L, barely caused systematic toxicity [39]. Clinical trials for TRAIL-based cancer therapies using
either recombinant forms of the humanTRAIL extracellular domain (dulanermin) or
agonistic antibodies specifically targeting DR4 (mapatumumab) or DR5 (e.g.
conatumumab) also revealed the safety and tolerability of these therapeutics.
However, clinical trials of TRAIL-based therapies have failed to produce
significant therapeutic responses in patients [38, 40, 41]. One of the key reasons for this limited
therapeutic activity is TRAIL resistance, either inherent or acquired after
repeated TRAIL administration.TRAIL-induced apoptosis signaling pathway. TRAIL initiates
apoptosis through binding to DR4 and/or DR5. TRAIL binding induces
receptor trimerization to promote the assembly of DISC (composed of FADD
and procaspases 8/10) to induce self-cleavage and thus activation of
caspases 8/10, which in turn trigger downstream caspase cascade to execute
apoptosis program. In certain cell types, activated caspase 8 cleaves BID
to generate truncated BID (tBID), which in turn triggers the mitochondrial
apoptosis pathway. c-FLIP competes with procaspase 8 for recruitment to
DISC, thereby suppressing activation of procaspase 8 and thus dampening
TRAIL-initiated apoptosis stimuli. Antiapoptotic BCL-2 family members
BCL-2, BCL-xL, and MCL-1 suppress the activation of the mitochondrial
apoptosis pathway to blunt TRAIL-induced apoptosis. IAP proteins survivin
and XIAP induce TRAIL resistance via
the blockade of the activity of executioner caspases.
3.3. TRAIL resistance mechanism
Our knowledge regarding the mechanisms of TRAIL resistance in tumor cells has
advanced greatly in recent years. In general, the deregulation of the molecules
involved in TRAIL-initiated apoptotic pathway is closely linked to the development
of TRAIL resistance [41, 42]. Briefly, three fundamental mechanisms are
commonly found in tumors with inherent or acquired TRAIL resistance. One, low
levels of cell-surface DR4/DR5 and/or overexpression of DcR1/DcR2 effectively
blunt TRAIL to turn on apoptosis. Two, TRAIL resistance can be caused by the
upregulation of c-FLIP, a caspase 8 homolog without caspase activity; increased
c-FLIP levels compete with procaspase 8 for recruitment to DISC, thus impairing
the activation of caspase 8 to mediate TRAIL’s proapoptotic action. And three,
overexpression of prosurvival proteins, including antiapoptotic BCL-2, BCL-xL and
MCL-1 as well as inhibitors of apoptosis proteins (IAPs) such as survivin and
XIAP, contribute to TRAIL resistance by blocking caspase activities.
3.4. Strategies to overcome TRAIL resistance
Given an acquired resistance to TRAIL commonly develops in most humantumors,
current clinical trials for TRAIL-based therapies employ combination strategies
using agents that overcome TRAIL resistance, thus restoring sensitivity to
TRAIL-induced apoptosis [39-45]. Intensive
studies in recent years have identified a number of potent TRAIL sensitizers in
the context of diverse cancer cell lines. These include conventional
chemotherapeutic drugs (e.g. cisplatin) [46], proteasome inhibitors (e.g. bortezomib) [47], Hsp90 inhibitors (e.g. 17-AAG)
[48], ER stress inducers (e.g.
tunicamycin) [49], and autophagy
inhibitors [45]. BH3 mimetics and
Smac mimetics, which selectively target antiapoptotic BCL-2 proteins and IAPs,
respectively, synergize with TRAIL as well [50-53]. It is also
noteworthy that some natural compounds have been validated as rich sources of
TRAIL sensitizers [43, 44, 54, 55].Reversing the mechanisms of TRAIL resistance forms the functional basis of
TRAIL-sensitizing agents. Indeed, the majority of TRAIL sensitizers reported to
date synergize with TRAIL by inducing up-regulation of DRs (particularly DR5),
thus highlighting DRs’ expression levels as the primary point of control for
TRAIL-induced apoptosis. In this context, DR5 is up-regulated through distinct
mechanisms of action [43]. Most
natural TRAIL sensitizers induce transcriptional up-regulation of DR5 in p53-
dependent or -independent manners, the latter of which often involves the
ROS-(JNK)-CHOP pathway, whereas the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib up-regulates
DR5 by facilitating DR5 protein stabilization. Alternatively, caspase 8 activation
caused by the down-regulation of c-FLIP at the transcriptional or
posttranslational levels underlies the mode of action of some TRAIL sensitizers
[45]. Likewise, small molecules
that bind and stabilize the caspase 8 homodimers can function as TRAIL stabilizers
by promoting caspase 8 activation upon TRAIL stimulation [56]. Chemotherapeutic drugs synergize with TRAIL
mainly through lowering the apoptotic threshold by up-regulating proapoptotic
BH3-only proteins while down-regulating antiapoptotic BCL-2 proteins and/or IAPs
[39].
4. Tanshinones reverse TRAIL resistance
4.1. Tanshinones are a new class of natural TRAIL sensitizers
Using the TRAIL-resistant humanovarian cancer cell lines TOV- 21G and SKOV3
as cellular models, in early 2013 we published the first report demonstrating the
TRAIL-sensitizing effect of crytotanshinones, tanshinone I, and tanshinone IIA
[57]. Later on, Tse et al. identified crytotanshinone as a TRAIL sensitizer
in the humanmelanoma cell line A375 and the lung adenocarcinoma cell line A549,
both refractory to TRAIL [58].
Likewise, Shin et al. recently reported that
tanshinone I restores the sensitivity of the TRAIL-resistant humanprostate cancer
cell lines PC-3 and DU145 to TRAIL-induced apoptosis [59]. These studies altogether establish
tanshinones as effective TRAIL sensitizers. Noteworthy, up-regulation of DR5
appears as the fundamental basis of TRAIL sensitization by tanshinones. Detailed
mechanisms whereby tanshinones overcome TRAIL resistance are summarized in the
following sections.
4.2. Tanshinone IIA synergizes with TRAIL to induce apoptosis by engaging
the ROS-JNK-CHOP signaling axis to up-regulate DR5 while activating p38 MAPK to
down-regulate survivin
We made the pioneering discovery that crytotanshione, tanshinone I, and
tanshinone IIA all exert TRAIL-enhancing action on the TRAIL-resistant humanepithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) cell lines TOV-21G and SKOV3, with tanshinone IIA
showing the best potency [57].
Subsequent analyses validated the synergy of this tanshinone IIA-TRAIL combination
in apoptotic killing of these EOC cell lines, as well as the transcriptional
up-regulation of DR5 along with increased
cell-surface DR5 expression following tanshinone IIA stimulation [60].The levels of DRs on the cell surface is essential for TRAIL to induce
effective apoptotic signaling, whereas low levels of cellsurface DRs confer TRAIL
resistance. Along this line, the functional blockade of DR5 by the DR5/Fc chimer
protein abolished tanshinone IIA’s action to sensitize TRAIL, indicating that DR5
up-regulation primarily determines tanshinone IIA as a TRAIL sensitizer in the
context of EOC cells. Mechanistic studies on how tanshinone IIA up-regulates DR5
uncovered that tanshinone IIA triggers reactive oxygen species (ROS) production to
induce JNK activation, leading to the transcriptional up-regulation of
CAAT/enhancer-binding protein homologous protein (CHOP), a well-established
transcriptional activator of the DR5 promoter.
The functional significance of the ROS-JNK-CHOP signaling axis in tanshinoneIIA-mediated DR5 up-regulation is clearly supported by the failure of tanshinoneIIA to induce DR5 when CHOP is depleted by CHOP shRNA, JNK-specific inhibitor
SP600125, or ROS scavenger N-acetylcysteine (NAC) [60].Down-regulation of IAPs such as survivin or XIAP represents an alternative
approach to overcome TRAIL resistance aside from DR5 up-regulation [42]. Survivin is recognized as an attractive
drug target owing to its selective expression in malignant cells [61]. Notably, high levels of survivin have been
associated with TRAIL resistance [62]. Along this line, we have revealed that tanshinone IIA induces
p38 MAPK-dependent transcriptional repression of survivin in TRAIL-resistant but
not TRAIL-sensitive human EOC cell lines [23]. Of note, ectopic survivin expression to counteract
tanshinone IIA-induced survivin reduction markedly attenuates the synergistic
cytotoxicity of the tanshinone IIATRAIL combination, indicating survivin
down-regulation as an important mode of action for transhinone IIA to overcome
TRAIL resistance. Collectively, these findings have delineated that multiple
mechanisms of action, including DR5 induction and survivin repression, are
involved in the tanshinone IIA-mediated sensitization of TRAIL-resistant human EOC
cells to TRAIL-induced apoptosis (Figure 5).
Fig. 5
The mechanisms underlying tanshinone IIA-TRAIL synergy.
Tanshinone IIA sensitizes TRAIL-resistant epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC)
cells to TRAIL-induced apoptosis through at least two mechanisms. First,
tanshinone IIA evokes ROS-dependent activation of JNK to increase CHOP
expression, which in turn activate DR5
transcription to up-regulate cell-surface DR5 levels for the potentiation
of TRAIL-induced apoptosis stimuli. Second, tanshinone IIA engages the p38
MAPK-mediated pathway to induce transcriptional down-regulation of
survivin, consequently promoting caspase activities to execute
apoptosis.
4.3. Tanshinone I restores TRAIL sensitivity through microRNA
135a-3p-mediated up-regulation of DR5
Using the humanprostate cancer cell lines PC-3 and DU-145 as cellular models,
Shin et al. demonstrated that Tanshinone I
synergistically sensitizes TRAIL-induced apoptosis in these TRAIL-resistant cells
[59]. Furthermore, the tanshinone
I-TRAIL combination up-regulated the mRNA and protein levels of DR5 and activated
the DR5 promoter, and this was accompanied by
an increase in cell-surface DR5 levels. Not surprisingly, the depletion of DR5
severely lowered the potency of tanshinone I to enhance TRAIL-induced apoptosis,
confirming the essential role of DR5 up-regulation in tanshinone I-mediated TRAIL
sensitization. Furthermore, Shin et al. made a
unique, noteworthy discovery that microRNA 135a-3p (miR135-3p) elicited by the
tanshinone I-TRAIL combination accounts for the up-regulation of DR5, whereas the
miR135-3p inhibitor attenuated the apoptosis induced by the tanshinone I-TRAIL
combination. However, how miR135-3p up-regulates DR5 was not demonstrated in the
report. Likewise, although tanshinone I evoked ROS production in these cell lines,
the roles of ROS in miR135-3p induction and TRAIL sensitization by tanshinone I
were not addressed either.The mechanisms underlying tanshinone IIA-TRAIL synergy.
Tanshinone IIA sensitizes TRAIL-resistant epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC)
cells to TRAIL-induced apoptosis through at least two mechanisms. First,
tanshinone IIA evokes ROS-dependent activation of JNK to increase CHOP
expression, which in turn activate DR5
transcription to up-regulate cell-surface DR5 levels for the potentiation
of TRAIL-induced apoptosis stimuli. Second, tanshinone IIA engages the p38
MAPK-mediated pathway to induce transcriptional down-regulation of
survivin, consequently promoting caspase activities to execute
apoptosis.
4.4. Cryptanshinone facilitates TRAIL sensitization by activating the
ROS-CHOP-DR5 pathway
To employ DR5 up-regulation as the strategy of to overcome TRAIL resistance,
Tse et al. identified cryptotanshinone, among
tanshinone I, dihydrotanshione I, and tanshinone IIA, as the most potent
tanshinones to induce DR5 expression in the TRAILresistant humanmelanomaA375
cells [58]. Similar to tanshinoneIIA, cryptotanshinone was revealed to induce transcriptional upregulation of DR5
along with increased levels of cell-surface DR5 expression. DR5 up-regulation is
essential for cryptotanshinone to overcome TRAIL resistance in the A375 cells, as
DR5 depletion markedly abrogated cryptotanshinone-mediated sensitization to
TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Similar to tanshinone IIA, cryptotanshinone elicited the
ROS-dependent transcriptional induction of CHOP, leading to increased DR5 transcription for enhancing TRAIL’s proapoptotic
action. It is also noteworthy that p53 is not required for cryptotanshinone to
up-regulate DR5, as evidenced by the comparable induction of DR5 in the HCT116
cell lines with or without p53 expression. As a matter of fact, the p53-
independent nature of DR5 up-regulation by cryptotanshinone is advantageous,
considering that the majority of humancancer cells are deficient in p53-mediated
apoptosis.
5. Conclusions and perspectives
TRAIL, which benefits from its malignant cell-selective proapoptotic action, is
an ideal cancer therapeutic agent, but its potential is ironically sabotaged by
either intrinsic or acquired resistance commonly developed by tumor cells. A
combination of TRAIL with agents that overcome TRAIL resistance mechanisms has been
validated in preclinical and clinical trials as a promising strategy to boost
TRAIL’s efficacy. In this regard, tanshinones as effective TRAIL sensitizers hold
great potential to be included in TRAIL-based cancer therapeutic regimens. As for
the TRAIL-sensitizing mechanisms of tanshinones, it appears that ROS-mediated DR5
up-regulation is the primary modes of action (except for transhinone IIA, which also
targets survivin). It would be informative to decipher additional targets of TRAIL
resistance mechanisms likely modulated by tanshinones in the context of various
types of tumor cells, as a detailed molecular understanding of tanshinones-elicited
TRAIL sensitization would allow for a rational design for more effective
tanshinones-TRAIL synergy. Furthermore, although only cryptotanshinone, tanshinone
I, and tanshinone IIA are validated as TRAIL sensitizers to date, additional members
of tanshinones that are more effective to circumvent TRAIL resistance are likely
present and remain to be discovered. It is also worth noting that the action of
tanshinones as TRAIL sensitizers have been demonstrated only at the in vitro level so far. Therefore, preclinical validation
of tanshinones- TRAIL synergy in xenograft or orthograft mousecancer models is
necessary for subsequent clinical trial design, which will hopefully lead to the
future translation of tanshinones to TRAIL-based cancer therapy.
Acknowledgments
This work was supported by grants from Central Taiwan University of Science and
Technology, Taichung, Taiwan (CTU104-P- 16); National Chung Hsing University and
Agricultural Research Institute, Council of Agriculture, Executive of Yuan, R.O.C.
(NCHU-TARI 9904 and NCHU-TARI 10104); Taichung Veterans General Hospital and
National Chung Hsing University, Taichung, Taiwan (TCVGH-NCHU997606); and The
Ministry of Education, Taiwan, R.O.C. under the ATU plan. We thank Dr. Jui-Sheng Lai
(Taiwan Agricultural Research Institute) for kindly providing the photographs of
Salvia miltiorrhiza. We are also grateful to
our students for contributing to the tanshinones-TRAIL synergy studies, and
apologize for the literature of tanshinones not being included in this article due
to limited space.
Declaration of interest
The authors declare no conflicts of interest for this work.
Authors: C J Henrich; A D Brooks; K L Erickson; C L Thomas; H R Bokesch; P Tewary; C R Thompson; R J Pompei; K R Gustafson; J B McMahon; T J Sayers Journal: Cell Death Dis Date: 2015-02-26 Impact factor: 8.469