| Literature DB >> 28352231 |
Saúl Redondo-Blanco1, Javier Fernández1, Ignacio Gutiérrez-Del-Río1, Claudio J Villar1, Felipe Lombó1.
Abstract
Combination therapy consists in the simultaneous administration of a conventional chemotherapy drug (or sometimes, a radiotherapy protocol) together with one or more natural bioactives (usually from plant or fungal origin) of small molecular weight. This combination of anticancer drugs may be applied to cell cultures of tumor cells, or to an animal model for a cancer type (or its xenograft), or to a clinical trial in patients. In this review, we summarize current knowledge describing diverse synergistic effects on colorectal cancer cell cultures, animal models, and clinical trials of various natural bioactives (stilbenes, flavonoids, terpenes, curcumin, and other structural families), which may be important with respect to diminish final doses of the chemotherapy drug, although maintaining its biological effect. This is important as these approaches may help reduce side effects in patients under conventional chemotherapy. Also, these molecules may exerts their synergistic effects via different cell cycle pathways, including different ones to those responsible of resistance phenotypes: transcription factors, membrane receptors, adhesion and structural molecules, cell cycle regulatory components, and apoptosis pathways.Entities:
Keywords: CRC; apoptosis; chemotherapy; combination therapy; nutraceutical; radiotherapy
Year: 2017 PMID: 28352231 PMCID: PMC5348533 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2017.00109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 1Chemical structures of bioactive stilbenes and flavonoids described in the text. (A) Resveratrol, (B) pterostilbene, (C) isoliquiritigenin, (D) apigenin, (E) chrysin, (F) quercetin, (G) oroxylin, (H) kaempferol, (I) genistein, (J) flavopiridol, (K) silibinin, (L) scutellarin, (M) EGCG.
Summary of main .
| Ali and Braun, | Resveratrol | Mitomycin C | CRC cell culture (primary cell lines from resected colorectal tumors) | Synergistic suppression of cell proliferation by resveratrol and Mitomycin C | Up-regulation of p21WAF1/CIP1 |
| Amiri et al., | Resveratrol | Etoposide | CRC cell culture (HCT-116) | Synergistic effect of resveratrol on etoposide | Up-regulation of |
| Buhrmann et al., | Resveratrol | 5-Flourouracil | CRC cell culture (HCT-116, SW480) in a 3D-alginate microenviroment | Synergistic activity between resveratrol and 5-Fu decreasing viability and inducing apoptosis | Up-regulation of desmosomes, gap and tight junction adhesion molecules. Inhibition of EMT factors. Down-regulation of NF-kB activation |
| Kaminski et al., | Resveratrol | Oxaliplatin | CRC cell culture (Caco-2) | Positive: CRC cells chemosensitization by resveratrol. Synergistic activity of resveratrol and oxaliplatin inhibiting CRC cell growth | Induction of cell death |
| Kumazaki et al., | Resveratrol | 5-Fluorouracil | CRC cell culture (DLD-1, SW480, COLO201) | Synergistic enhancement of growth inhibition and apoptosis | Up-regulation of miR-34a expression causing a down-regulation of |
| Majumdar et al., | Resveratrol | Curcumin | CRC cell culture (HCT-116) and mouse xenograft CRC models | Synergism between curcumin and resveratrol inhibiting growth of CRC cells | Attenuation of NF-κB activity. Inhibition of constitutive activation of EGFR |
| Mohapatra et al., | Resveratrol | 5-Fluorouracil | CRC cell culture (HCT-116) | Synergistic induction of apoptosis | Cell cycle arrest in S phase, enhanced DNA damage |
| Santandreu et al., | Resveratrol | 5-Fluorouracil | CRC cell culture (HT-29, SW620) | Positive: Resveratrol sensitize CCR cells to 5-Fluorouracil | Increase in oxidative stress, inactivation or down-regulation of redox-sensitive proteins |
| Yang S. et al., | Resveratrol | Oxaliplatin | CRC cell culture (HCT-116, HT-29) and mouse xenograft CRC model | Synergistic effect of resveratrol and oxaliplatin in a | Up-regulation of |
| Fulda and Debatin, | Resveratrol | 5-Fluorouracil | CRC cell culture (HCT-116) and other human cancer cell lines | Positive: Resveratrol sensitizes CRC cells for subsequent treatment with 5-Fu | Cell cycle arrest and apoptosis by downregulation of surviving, irrespective of p53 status |
| Hwang et al., | Resveratrol | Etoposide | CRC cell culture (HT-29) | Positive: Resveratrol chemosensitizes CRC cells for subsequent treatment with etoposide | inhibition of cell growth, increase of ROS generation, activation of AMPK, induction of apoptosis |
| Tolba and Abdel-Rahman, | Pterostilbene | 5-Fluorouracil | CRC cell culture (HCT-116, Caco-2) | Synergistic effect of pterostilbene on cytotoxic effects of 5-FU | Supression of Akt and ERK phosphorylation. Increase of FOXO-1 and p27kip1 levels |
Summary of main .
| Horinaka et al., | Apigenin | TRAIL | CRC cell culture (DLD-1) | Synergistic potentiation of TRAIL-induced apoptosis | Up-regulation of DR5 |
| Shao et al., | Apigenin | ABT-263 (Navitoclax) | CRC cell culture (HTC-116) and SCID mice bearing HTC-116 xenografts | Synergistic induction of apoptosis, antagonism effect on ABT-263-induced Mcl-1 up-regulation and greater tumour growth inhibition | Down-regulation of Mcl-1, inhibition of PI3K/AKT pathway and ERK phosphorylation |
| Yoshida et al., | Kaempferol | TRAIL | CRC cell culture (SW480 and DLD-1) | Positive: Increase in apoptotic induction in a kaempferol-dose dependent manner | Up-regulation of DR5 |
| Li et al., | Chrysin | TNFα | CRC cell culture (HCT-116) | Positive: Increase in cell death | Inhibition of TNFα-induced NF-κβ activation |
| Khan et al., | Chrysin | Cisplatin | Wistar rats | Positive: Prophylactic effect against colon toxicity | Reducing oxidative stress |
| Ding et al., | Chrysin | TRAIL | CRC cell culture (HT-29) | Positive: Enhanced TRAIL-induced cell death | Suppression of c-FLIP and up-regulation of DR5 |
| León et al., | Chrysin | Vanadyl cation | CRC cell culture (HT-29) | Positive: Cell cycle arrest in G2/M phase | Decrease in GSH levels |
| Hwang et al., | Genistein | 5-FU | CRC cell culture (HT-29) | Synergistic effect on cell growth blocking | Over-expression of pro-apoptotic p53 and p21, down-regulation of Glut-1 and down-regulation of COX-2 |
| Hu et al., | Genistein | Cisplatin | CRC cell culture (HT-29) | Positive: Inhibited cell growth and induced apoptosis in an additive manner | Inhibition of TK |
| Park et al., | Genistein | Dexamethasone | CRC cell culture (Colo320 HSR) | Synergistic effect on blocking cell cycle | Increase in p21 levels |
| Son et al., | Genistein | Radiotherapy | BALB/c mice bearing CT26 xenografts | Positive: Less non-tumorigenic apoptotic cells and improved morphological changes in healthy intestinal tissue | Activation of antioxidant systems |
| Gruca et al., | Genistein | Radiotherapy | CRC cell culture (HCT-116) | Synergistic effect on clonogenic survival | Enhanced EGFR inhibition and prolonged inhibition of AKT and ERK |
| Kumazaki et al., | EGCG | 5-FU | CRC cell culture (DLD-1, SW480 and COLO201) | Synergistic growth suppression | Regulation of ABC transporter-related genes |
| Saldanha et al., | EGCG | Sodium butyrate | CRC cell culture (HT-29) | Synergistic induction of apoptosis | Down-regulation of survivin |
| Ohishi et al., | EGCG | Sulindac | Azoxymethane colon cancer induction in rats | Synergistic induction of apoptosis | Enhanced inhibition of COX-2 |
| Ambrosini et al., | Flavopiridol | SN-38 | HCT116 cell line | Synergistic effect on the apoptotic effects of SN-38 | Down-regulation of Rad51 by p53 and Cdk9 inhibition. |
| Darpolor et al., | Flavopiridol | Irinotecan | Mice xenograft (HCT116) | Improves tumor response | Reduces cytokine activity |
| Fornier et al., | Flavopiridol | Docetaxel | Phase I trial | Partial responses and a complete response in one patient | Unknown |
| Guo et al., | Flavopiridol | Docetaxel and 5-FU | Mice xenograft (HCT116) | Significant decrease in a tumor volume | Unknown |
| Motwani et al., | Flavopiridol | SN-38 | Mouse xenograft model | Flavopiridol enhances a reduction in tumors | The effect is produced by p21 |
| Colombo et al., | Silymarin | Doxorubicin and paclitaxel | LoVo cell line | Synergistic effect in LoVo cells and additive in LoVo/DX | Low expression of p-gp pump |
| León et al., | Silymarin | Vanadium compounds | HT29 cell line | Improves cytotoxic effect | Inhibits topoisomerase IB activity and NF-κB |
| Tsai et al., | Silibinin | Metformin | COLO205 cell line | Reduction cell viability more than 60% | Increase caspase 3 activation and AIF expression |
| Psahoulia et al., | Quercetin | TRAIL | Caco-2, SW620 and HT29 cell lines | Sensitizes the cells to the treatment | Distribution of death factors in raft domains that are the initiators of apoptosis |
| Xavier et al., | Quercetin | 5-FU | Co115 and HCT15 cell lines | Enhances apoptosis more than 100 times | The effect is mediated by p53 |
| Osman et al., | Luteolin | Aspirin | Colorectal cancer in rats | Highly significant reduction in polyps number and size | Enhance inhibition the inflammatory response |
| Chan et al., | Scutellarin | 5-FU | HCT116 cell line | A significant increase in apoptosis levels | p53-regulated caspase-6 activation mechanism |
| Lee et al., | Isoliquiritigenin | Cisplatin | Mice xenograft (CT26) | Reduce 79% tumor growth and reduces adverse effects | Mechanism in combination is unknown |
| Ha et al., | Oroxylin | 5-FU | HT29 cell line and mice xenografts (HT29) | Reduce 66% tumor growth and shows synergistic effects in HT29 cell line | Inhibition of COX-2 gene expression |
| Cheah et al., | Procyanidins | 5-FU | Caco-2 cell line | Increase cytotoxicity | Unknown |
Figure 2Chemical structures of bioactive terpenoids and other compounds described in the text. (A) geraniol, (B) irofulven, (C) artesunate, (D) triptolide, (E) ursolic acid, (F) ginsenoside, (G) celastrol, (H) betulinic acid, (I) fucoxanthin, (J) curcumin, (K) gossypol.
Summary of main .
| Carnesecchi et al., | Geraniol | 5-FU | Caco-2 cell line | Synergistic: 20% reduction in cell survival | Down-regulation of Bcl-2 |
| Carnesecchi et al., | Geraniol | 5-FU | Mice xenograft (TC118) | Synergistic: 80% reduction in tumor size | Unknown |
| Serova et al., | Irofulven | Oxaliplatin | HT-29 cell line | Synergistic: reduced cell survival | Unknown |
| Britten et al., | Irofulven | Irinotecan | Mice xenograft (HT-29) | Synergistic: tumor size reduction | Unknown |
| Liu et al., | Artesunate | Oxaliplatin | HCT116 cell line | Synergistic: 50% cell killing | ROS induction |
| Liu et al., | Triptolide | Oxaliplatin | SW480 cell line | Synergistic: 62% cell killing | Apoptosis induction, blocking of β-catenin translocation to nucleus |
| Liu et al., | Triptolide | Oxaliplatin | Mice xenograft (SW480) | Synergistic: 60% tumor growth reduction | Unknown |
| Koh et al., | Ursolic acid | Radiotherapy | CT26 and HCT116 cell lines | Synergistic: 55% cell killing | Apoptosis induction, caspase 3 activation, ROS increase, GSH, NF-kB and Bcl-2 reductions |
| Wang et al., | Ginsenolides | 5-FU | Mice xenograft (HCT116) | Synergistic: reduced tumor size | G1 arrest |
| Kim et al., | Ginsenolides | Docetaxel | HCT116 cell line | Synergistic: increased cell death | NF-kB inhibiton, Bcl-2 repression |
| Zhu et al., | Calastrol | TRAIL | SW620 cell line | Synergistic: increased cell killing | Apoptosis induction |
| Jung et al., | Betulinic acid | 5-FU, oxaliplatin, irinotecan | SNU-C5 cell line | Synergistic: increased cell killing, reduction in chemoresistance | Apoptosis induction (caspase 3) |
| Li et al., | Curcumin | Oxaliplatin | Lo-Vo cell line | Synergistic: growth inhibition | Unknown |
| Anitha et al., | Curcumin | 5-FU | HT-29 | Synergistic: increased cells killing | Apoptosis induction |
| Murakami et al., | Curcumin | Turmerones | CRC mouse model (dimethyl-hydrazine) | Synergistic: tumor size reduction | Apoptosis induction |
| Yue et al., | Curcumin | Bevacizumab | Mice xenograft (HT-29) | Synergistic: tumor size reduction | Apoptosis induction |
| Zhang et al., | Gossypol | 5-FU | Mice xenograft (HT-29) | Synergistic: tumor size reduction | Apoptosis induction, chemical sensitization |
Figure 3Chemotherapy compounds that have been mentioned in this work and their main side effects.