| Literature DB >> 29399381 |
John Matthew Bryant1, Mollie Bouchard1, Azizul Haque1.
Abstract
Ganoderma lucidum is a mushroom that has a long history of medicinal use in the Far East countries as this mushroom is revered for its supposed miracle cures and life improving properties. Recently, this mushroom has come under scientific scrutiny to examine the possibility of finding biologically active compounds that may have an impact on human physiology. The main category of biologically active compounds produced in the G. lucidum, are the triterpenoids, which are known as Ganoderic Acids. In this review, we discuss one Ganoderic Acid in particular known as Ganoderic Acid-DM (GA-DM) that is extracted from the Ganoderma lucidum mushroom. We will discuss GA-DM as a potential therapeutic candidate for treating a number of diseases yet will focus on the potential to be used as an alternative or supplemental therapeutic agent in regards to various cancer types. The urge for this promising therapeutic agent is that GA-DM is capable of inducing cell death in cancer cells while exhibiting minimal toxicity to normal bystander cells. Furthermore, this review will look at GA-DM's ability to stimulate an immune response in the tumor environment to potentially provide long-term protection from the malignant tumors. We will also discuss the known routes of administration of GA-DM and pose the advantages and disadvantages of each route in a comparative manner. Finally, we will cover current status of the roles GA-DM may have as a therapeutic agent in respect to different cancer types as wells as discuss about its future perspective as a therapeutic candidate in other diseases as well.Entities:
Keywords: Anticancer; Cell death; Ganoderic acid-DM (GA-DM); Ganoderma lucidum; T cells
Year: 2017 PMID: 29399381 PMCID: PMC5795599 DOI: 10.4172/2155-9899.1000535
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Cell Immunol
Overview of current research involving GA-DM as a therapeutic agent in malignant and inflammatory diseases.
| Cell Types | Disease to emulate | Anti-proliferative | Anti-metastatic | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PC-3 and LnCaP | Prostate cancer | yes | yes | Johnson et al. 2014 |
| HT-144, 1359-mel, DM-331, J3, B16 | Melanoma | yes | yes | |
| BCF-7. MDA-MB-231 | Breast cancer | yes | Data not available | |
| Ovx model, Raw 264 cell D-clone | Osteoporosis | yes | - | |
| T-Rex293 (transfected with pcDNA3-Aβ42-EGFP plasmid), T-Rex293-LEA15 | Alzheimer’s disease | yes | - | |
| IOMM-Lee, CH157MN | Meningioma | yes | yes |
Figure 1Proposed mechanisms by which GA-DM may exhibit anticancer activity. GA-DM may induce a crosstalk between autophagy and apoptosis, leading to an enhanced immune recognition of tumor. GA-DM treatment induces cell cycle arrest (G1 phase), downregulates survival proteins (bcl-2, Mcl-1, survivin, etc), upregulates apoptosis related proteins (Bax, Apaf-1), activates effector caspases (caspase 3), and may ultimately induce tumor cell death regardless of p53 status. GA-DM treatment may also disrupt p53/mdm2 and upregulate autophagic (Beclin-1, LC3) and immunomodulatory components.