| Literature DB >> 33182828 |
Deborah Termini1, Danja J Den Hartogh1,2, Alina Jaglanian1, Evangelia Tsiani1,2.
Abstract
Cancer is a condition characterized by remarkably enhanced rates of cell proliferation paired with evasion of cell death. These deregulated cellular processes take place following genetic mutations leading to the activation of oncogenes, the loss of tumor suppressor genes, and the disruption of key signaling pathways that control and promote homeostasis. Plant extracts and plant-derived compounds have historically been utilized as medicinal remedies in different cultures due to their anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and antimicrobial properties. Many chemotherapeutic agents used in the treatment of cancer are derived from plants, and the scientific interest in discovering plant-derived chemicals with anticancer potential continues today. Curcumin, a turmeric-derived polyphenol, has been reported to possess antiproliferative and proapoptotic properties. In the present review, we summarize all the in vitro and in vivo studies examining the effects of curcumin in prostate cancer.Entities:
Keywords: androgen-insensitive; androgen-sensitive; apoptosis; curcumin; in vitro; in vivo; polyphenol; proliferation; prostate cancer; survival
Year: 2020 PMID: 33182828 PMCID: PMC7696488 DOI: 10.3390/biom10111536
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Figure 1Prostate cancer subtypes and the respective best treatment strategy available.
Current available treatments for prostate cancer.
| Treatment | Target | Risks and Recurrence |
|---|---|---|
|
| Efficient against localized and early- or advanced-stage tumors [ | Moderate biochemical recurrence rate in localized tumors, risk of spreading beyond original location [ |
|
| Efficient against androgen- dependent carcinomas | Androgen insensitivity may develop leading to reoccurrence [ |
|
| Efficient against localized tumors or minimally metastasized tumors [ | Low efficacy if tumor has developed beyond early stages, requiring combination treatments; higher mortality compared to prostatectomy |
|
| Primarily utilized to treat advanced-stage, metastatic, castration-resistant prostate cancer | Improves quality of life and slows disease progression in high-risk prostate cancer, but unlikely to cure it [ |
Major prostate cancer cell lines and representative prostate cancer subtypes.
| Prostate Cancer Cell Line | Category | Gene Mutations | Representative Prostate Cancer Subtype |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Prostatic adenocarcinoma, derived from a bone metastasis of grade IV prostate cancer extracted from a 62 year old Caucasian male [ | PTEN, p53 [ | Androgen-insensitive, highly invasive, rare small-cell prostatic carcinoma [ |
|
| Prostatic adenocarcinoma, derived from a metastasis in the CNS of a 69 year old Caucasian male originating from a primary prostate adenocarcinoma [ | p53 [ | Androgen-insensitive, invasive osteolytic tumor phenotype [ |
|
| Prostatic adenocarcinoma, derived from a human carcinoma xenograft (CWR22R) serially propagated in nude mice following the castration-induced regression and relapse of androgen dependent CWR22 xenograft [ | p53 [ | Androgen-sensitive but androgen-independent, low invasiveness, tumors form primarily osteosclerotic lesions [ |
|
| Prostatic adenocarcinoma, derived from a lymph node metastasis extracted from a 50 year old Caucasian male [ | PTEN [ | Androgen-sensitive, localized tumor, fast growth but low invasiveness [ |
|
| Prostatic adenocarcinoma cell lines derived from co-inoculation of LNCaP androgen-dependent cell lines with fibroblasts derived from human osteosarcoma in nude athymic mice for 12 weeks after castration at 8 weeks, and then re-inoculating the extracted tumor with osteosarcoma fibroblasts in castrated mice for another 12 weeks [ | PTEN [ | Androgen-sensitive but androgen-independent, highly metastatic, primarily form osteoblastic lesions [ |
Figure 2Chemical structure of (A) curcumin, (B) bisdemethoxycurcumin, and (C) demethoxycurcumin.
In vitro evidence of the effects of curcumin on androgen-sensitive prostate cancer cells.
| Cell Line | Curcumin Dosage | Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| LNCaP | 0–50 μM; 72 h to assess cell proliferation and cell morphology | ↓ Proliferation | [ |
| LNCaP | 10 and 50 μM; 1–4 days to assess cell viability | ↓ Cell viability | [ |
| LNCaP | 40 μM; 21 days to assess colony formation efficiency | ↓ Cell growth | [ |
| LNCaP | 0–100 μM; 24 h to assess cell proliferation and cyclin D1 protein expression | ↓ Proliferation | [ |
| LNCaP | 5–40 μM; 48 h to assess cell viability, caspase activity, DNA fragmentation | ↓ Cell viability | [ |
| LNCaP | 35 μM; 0–4 h | ↓ p-Akt | [ |
| C4-2B | 0-15 μM; 1 h to assess EGFR autophosphorylation | ↓ EGFR autophosphorylation | [ |
| LNCaP | 10 μM; 48 h to assess cytotoxicity | ↑ Cytotoxicity | [ |
| LNCaP | 0–40 μM; 24 h | ↓ NKX3.1 mRNA and protein | [ |
| LNCaP | 0–50 μM; 0–72 h | ↓ MDM2 | [ |
| LNCaP | 0–30 μM; 48 h to assess cell viability and the expression of Bcl-2, Bax, and Bak | ↓ Cell viability | [ |
| LNCaP | 10 μM; 48 h to assess cell viability and NF-κB expression | ↓ p-Akt | [ |
| LNCaP | 25 μM; 17 h | ↑ MKP5 mRNA | [ |
| LNCaP | 0–30 μM; 24 h to assess cell viability | ↓ Cell viability | [ |
| LNCaP | 20 μM; 24 h to assess cell-cycle progression | ↑ Cell cycle arrest at the G1/S phase | [ |
| LNCaP, C4-2B | 0–100 μM; 24–74 h to assess cell proliferation | ↓ Proliferation | [ |
| LNCaP | 0–80 μM; 24–72 h to assess cell proliferation | ↓ Proliferation | [ |
| LNCaP | 10 μM, 25 μM, or 50 μM; 24 h | ↓ Cell viability | [ |
| TRAMP-C2 | 0–100 μM; 24 and 72 h | ↓ Cell growth | [ |
| LNCaP | 25, 50, and 100 μM; 24–72 h to assess apoptosis and DNA fragmentation | ↑ Apoptosis | [ |
| LNCaP | 0–100 μM; 24 and 48 h to assess cell proliferation | ↓ Proliferation | [ |
| 22RV1, LNCaP | 10–100 μM; 4 and 24 h | ↑ Curcumin compartmentalization within cytoplasm and exclusion from nucleus | [ |
| LNCaP | 10 μM; 24 h | ↓ AR | [ |
| TRAMP-C1 | 2.5 and 5 μM; 5 days to assess protein and gene expression | ↓ Hypermethylation of CpG sites in Nrf2 | [ |
| LNCaP | 5 μM; 7 days | ↑ Cytotoxicity | [ |
| LNCaP, 22RV1 | 20 μM; 24 h | ↓ AR | [ |
| LNCaP, C4-2B | 5–40 μM; 48 h to assess cell proliferation | ↓ Proliferation | [ |
| LNCaP, CW22RV1, C-33 | 0–50 μM; 16 h | ↓ Cell migration/invasion | [ |
| LNCaP | 25 μM; 48 h to evaluate apoptosis, gene and protein expression | ↓ Cell viability | [ |
| LNCaP, 22RV1 | 0–50 μM; 0–72 h to assess cell proliferation | ↓ Cell viability | [ |
| LNCaP | 10 U/mL | ↑ Apoptosis | [ |
| LNCaP, C4-2B | 10 μM; 3–48 h to assess gene expression | ↑ Apoptosis | [ |
Figure 3Effects of curcumin treatment on prostate cancer cells in vitro. The figure is based on the data of the studies [54,55,56,57,58,59,60,61,62,63,64,65,66,67,68] and created using BioRender.com.
In vitro evidence of the effects of curcumin on androgen-insensitive prostate cancer cells.
| Cell Line | Curcumin Dosage | Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| PC3 | 0–50 μM; 0–72 h | ↓ Proliferation | [ |
| DU-145 | 10 and 50 μM; 1–4 days to assess cell viability | ↓ Cell viability | [ |
| PC3 | 30 μM; 21 days to assess colony formation efficiency | ↓ Cell growth | [ |
| DU-145 | 5–40 μM; 48 h | ↓ Cell viability | [ |
| PC3, DU-145 | 35 μM; 30 min in PC3 | ↓ p-Akt in PC3 only | [ |
| DU-145 | 0–125 ug/mL; 24–72 h to assess cell proliferation | ↓ Proliferation | [ |
| PC3 | 0–50 μM; 0–72 h to assess the expression of MDM2, p21, Bax, and E2F1 | ↓ Cell viability | [ |
| DU-145, PC3 | 0–30 μM; 48 h to assess cell viability | ↓ Cell viability | [ |
| PC3, DU-145 | 20 μM in DU-145, 30 μM in PC3; 48 h to assess cell viability and NF-κB expression | ↓ NF-κB | [ |
| PC3, DU-145 | 25 μM; 17 h | ↑ MKP5 mRNA | [ |
| PC3 | 0–30 μM; 24 h to assess cell viability | ↓ Cell viability | [ |
| PC3 | 20 μM; 24 h to assess cell-cycle progression | ↑ Cell-cycle arrest at the G1/S phase | [ |
| PC3 | 0–100 μM; 24 h | ↓ Cell proliferation | [ |
| PC3 | 0–50 μM; 24 h to assess cell viability, 8h to assess protein and DNA synthesis | ↓ Proliferation | [ |
| PC3 | 30 μM; 18 h | ↓ CCL2 triggered cell adhesion | [ |
| Pc-Bra1 | 10 μM, 25 μM, or 50 μM; 24 h | ↓ Cell viability | [ |
| PC3 | 25, 50, and 100 μM; 24–72 h to assess apoptosis and DNA fragmentation | ↑ Apoptosis | [ |
| PC3, DU-145 | 10–100 μM; 4 and 24 h | Curcumin compartmentalization within cytoplasm and exclusion from nucleus | [ |
| PC3 | 50 μM; 24 h | ↓ Proliferation | [ |
| PC3 | 20 μM; 24 h | ↑ IL-6, INS, DDIT3, NDRG1, MIR-152 | [ |
| PC3 | 15 μM; 24 h | ↓ Iκb kinase β | [ |
| PC3, DU-145, | 0–50 μM; 16 h, 24 h | ↓ Cell growth | [ |
| PC3 | 0–20 μM; 48 h | ↓ Cell viability | [ |
| PC3, DU-145, | 40 μM; 0–24 h to assess expression of ERK1/2, SAPK/JNK | ↓ Cell viability | [ |
| PC3 | 25 μM | ↓ EMT | [ |
| DU-145 | 0–50 μM; 48 h to assess cell proliferation | ↑ Cell death | [ |
| DU-145 | 10–50 μM; 24–72 h to assess cell viability and apoptotic activity | ↓ Proliferation | [ |
| PC3, DU-145 | 0–50 μM; 24h | ↑ Apoptosis | [ |
| DU-145, PC3 | 0–50 μM; 48 h to assess dose–response relationship | ↓ Cell viability | [ |
| DU145, PC3 | 10 μM; 1–5 days to assess cell viability and migration | ↑ miR-143 | [ |
| PC3 | 5 μg/mL; 72 h | ↓ Cell viability | [ |
| PC3 | 25 μM; 48 h to evaluate apoptosis, gene and protein expression | ↓ Cell viability | [ |
| PC3, DU-145 | 0–20 μM; 4 days to assess cell viability | ↓ Cell viability | [ |
In vitro evidence of the effects of curcumin on prostate cancer stem cells.
| Cell Line | Curcumin Dosage | Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 22RV1 and DU-145 stem cells | 46.5 μM; 24 and 48h | ↓ Proliferation | [ |
| 22RV1 and DU-145 stem cells | 46.5 μM; 24 and 48 h to assess proliferation | ↓ Proliferation | [ |
In vivo evidence of the effects of curcumin on prostate cancer.
| Animal Model | Curcumin Dosage | Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heterotopically implanted LNCaP cell tumors in athymic nude mice | 2% composition of a synthetic diet; 6 weeks | ↓ Proliferation | [ |
| SCID mice implanted with DU-145 cells | 5 mg/kg b.w./3 times per week; 4 weeks | ↓ Tumor volume | [ |
| NCr nude male mice injected with PC3 cells | 6 µM three times per week; 4 weeks | ↑ Apoptosis | [ |
| PC3 tumor-bearing nude mice | 5 mg/kg b.w./5 times per week; 4 weeks | ↓ Tumor growth | [ |
| Balb c nude mice implanted with TRAIL-resistant LNCaP cells | 30 mg.kg b.w./3 times per week; 6 weeks | ↑ Apoptosis | [ |
| TRAMP mice with prostate adenocarcinoma | 1–2% dietary composition; 10 or 16 weeks | ↓ Tumor formation | [ |
| PTEN-KO mice | 250 µM; 7 weeks | ↓ Prostate adenocarcinomas | [ |
| Nude mice injected with PC3 cells | 10 µM; 24 h | ↓ PC3 cell proliferation | [ |
| CD-1 Foxn1nu male mice injected with PC3 cells | 1% diet; 5 weeks | ↓ Lung metastasis | [ |
| Athymic nude mice inoculated with C4-3 cells | 25 µg; intratumoral injection once | ↓ Tumor growth | [ |
| Male nude mice inoculated with luciferase-expressed PC3 cells | 100 mg/kg b.w.; 3 weeks | ↓ Tumor growth | [ |
| Athymic mice injected with C4-2 cells | 25 µg; intratumoral injection once | ↓ Tumor volume | [ |
| SCID mice implanted with C4-2B cells | 1–2% diet; 4 weeks | ↓ Tumor progression | [ |
| BALB/c mice injected with PC3 cells | 100 mg/kg b.w./day; 1 month | ↓ Tumor volume | [ |
| Balb/c nude mice administered prostate PC3 cells | 25 mg/kg b.w./day; 30 days | ↑ Apoptosis | [ |
| Balb/c nude mice subcutaneously inoculated with LNCaP cells | 500 mg/kg b.w./3 times per week; 4 weeks | ↓ Prostate cancer tumor | [ |
| FVB/N mice injected with HMVP2 spheroids | 1.0% diet; 32 days | ↑ Apoptosis | [ |
| BALB/c nude mice subcutaneously injected with CD44+/CD133+ HuPCaSCs pretreated with curcumin | IC50; 48 h | ↓ Tumor size | [ |
| Immunodeficient mice subcutaneously xenografted with LNCap cells | 30 mg/kg; 50 days | ↓ Tumor size | [ |
| Male TRAMP mice | 200 mg/kg b.w./day; 1 month | ↓ Testosterone level | [ |
| DU145 xenograft mice | 25 µg; 7 days or 12 h | ↓ DU145 cell solid tumors | [ |
| Male Kumming mice injected with S180 cells | 18.8 mg/kg b.w./day; 10 days | ↑ Survival | [ |
| Prostate cancer CD1 mice xenografts (PC3, 22rv1, and DU145 cell-lines) | 800 mg/kg; days 1, 9, 18, 27, and 34 | ↑ Apoptosis | [ |
| 76 or 380 mg/kg b.w./day; 16 weeks | ↓ Proliferation | [ |
Figure 4Effects of curcumin administration to animals xenografted with prostate cancer cells. The figure was created based on data from the studies [85,86,88,103,104,105,106,107,108,109,110,111,112,113,114,115,116,117] and created using BioRender.com.