scholarly journals Antileukemic Effect of Tualang Honey on Acute and Chronic Leukemia Cell Lines

2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nik Muhd Khuzaimi Nik Man ◽  
Rosline Hassan ◽  
Cheng Yong Ang ◽  
Abu Dzarr Abdullah ◽  
Muhammad Amiro Rasheeq Mohd Radzi ◽  
...  

Complementary medicine using natural product as antitumor is on the rise. Much research has been performed on Tualang Honey and it was shown to have therapeutic potential in wound healing, and antimicrobial activity and be antiproliferative against several cancer models such as human osteosarcoma (HOS), human breast (MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231), and cervical (HeLa) cancer cell lines. To date, there was limited study on antileukemic properties of Tualang (Koompassia excelsa) Honey. The aim of this study was to evaluate the antileukemic effect of Tualang Honey on acute and chronic leukemia cell lines. Leukemia cell lines (K562 and MV4-11) and human mononuclear cell isolated from peripheral blood were grown in RPM1 1640 culture medium. The cells were incubated with increasing concentrations of Tualang Honey. After incubation, the evaluation of viability and apoptosis was performed. The morphological changes of leukemia cells were the presence of cytoplasmic blebs followed by apoptotic bodies and round shape of cells. IC50against K562 and MV4-11 was determined. Tualang Honey gave 53.9% and 50.6% apoptosis activity on K562 and MV4-11, respectively, while on human mononuclear cell it was 37.4%. Tualang Honey has the apoptosis-inducing ability for acute and chronic myeloid leukemia (K562 and MV4-11) cell lines.

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (8) ◽  
pp. 4265
Author(s):  
Jang Mi Han ◽  
Hong Lae Kim ◽  
Hye Jin Jung

Leukemia is a type of blood cancer caused by the rapid proliferation of abnormal white blood cells. Currently, several treatment options, including chemotherapy, radiation therapy, and bone marrow transplantation, are used to treat leukemia, but the morbidity and mortality rates of patients with leukemia are still high. Therefore, there is still a need to develop more selective and less toxic drugs for the effective treatment of leukemia. Ampelopsin, also known as dihydromyricetin, is a plant-derived flavonoid that possesses multiple pharmacological functions, including antibacterial, anti-inflammatory, antioxidative, antiangiogenic, and anticancer activities. However, the anticancer effect and mechanism of action of ampelopsin in leukemia remain unclear. In this study, we evaluated the antileukemic effect of ampelopsin against acute promyelocytic HL60 and chronic myelogenous K562 leukemia cells. Ampelopsin significantly inhibited the proliferation of both leukemia cell lines at concentrations that did not affect normal cell viability. Ampelopsin induced cell cycle arrest at the sub-G1 phase in HL60 cells but the S phase in K562 cells. In addition, ampelopsin regulated the expression of cyclins, cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs), and CDK inhibitors differently in each leukemia cell. Ampelopsin also induced apoptosis in both leukemia cell lines through nuclear condensation, loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, increase in reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, activation of caspase-9, caspase-3, and poly ADP-ribose polymerase (PARP), and regulation of Bcl-2 family members. Furthermore, the antileukemic effect of ampelopsin was associated with the downregulation of AKT and NF-κB signaling pathways. Moreover, ampelopsin suppressed the expression levels of leukemia stemness markers, such as Oct4, Sox2, CD44, and CD133. Taken together, our findings suggest that ampelopsin may be an attractive chemotherapeutic agent against leukemia.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 1094-1094
Author(s):  
Sonja Loges ◽  
Thomas Schmidt ◽  
Maria Kleppe ◽  
Kim De Keersmaecker ◽  
Marc Tjwa ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction of imatinib and second-generation BCR/ABL inhibitors has revolutionized treatment of patients with Philadelphia chromosome positive (Ph+) leukemia, but leukemia cells persist even in successfully treated patients, and some patients develop resistance and ultimately relapse. The reasons for these drawbacks are not entirely resolved, but besides BCR/ABL the host stroma potentially plays an important (independent) role. Placental Growth Factor (PlGF), a homologue of VEGF, was already proven to be abundantly secreted by stromal cells in solid tumors. Therefore, we investigated the role of PlGF, and the therapeutic potential of αPlGF, a monoclonal antibody against PlGF, which we recently reported to have a broad anti-tumoral potential in pre-clinical models of solid tumors (Fischer et al., Cell, 2007), in BCR/ABL+ lymphoid and myeloid leukemia. First, we studied expression of PlGF by 5 different human and murine BCR/ABL+ leukemia cell lines (Bv-173, BaF3, 32D, K562, KCL22) in vitro and found that neither of the cell lines secreted PlGF protein, but expressed its target receptor VEGFR-1. In contrast, primary murine adherent bone marrow stromal cells (BMDSC) expressed abundant amounts of PlGF protein (up to 105 pg/ml/105 cells), indicating a potential stroma-related function of PlGF. Second, we analyzed whether PlGF could induce proliferation and thereby revealed dose-dependent induction of proliferation by recombinant PlGF in all analyzed leukemia cell lines. This pro-proliferative effect of PlGF was nearly completely abrogated by both αPlGF and an extracellular anti-VEGFR-1 antibody, thus indicating that it is mediated primarily by VEGFR-1. Third, we studied potential paracrine interactions between BMDSCs and leukemia cells by performing co-culture experiments. Remarkably, coculture of BMDSC with leukemia cells significantly induced proliferation of both cell types. We hypothesized, that this induction of proliferation might be mediated by PlGF and indeed found its nearly complete abrogation upon addition of αPlGF to the co-cultures. Furthermore, BMDSCs significantly upregulated PlGF secretion (2.1 fold; N=3; P=0.005) when cultured in presence of leukemia cells. Thus, we conclude, that stromal derived PlGF promotes proliferation of leukemia cells in a paracrine fashion and at the same time acts as autocrine pro-proliferative signal for stromal cells. To test this hypothesis in vivo, we established 3 different murine models of BCR/ABL+ myeloid and lymphoid leukemia. Subsequently, we analyzed PlGF protein as present in blood and bone marrow of diseased mice in comparison to healthy mice, and detected no PlGF protein in the peripheral blood of healthy mice and low amounts of PlGF protein in their bone marrow. In contrast, leukemic mice showed PlGF protein (76.5 ± 18.4 pg / ml plasma; N=7) in their circulation at levels comparable to mice bearing solid tumors, and, interestingly more than 8.9 fold (N=7; P<0.0001) elevated PlGF levels in their bone marrow, compared to healthy mice, again indicating that PlGF represents a stroma derived, novel pathogenetic factor in Ph+ leukemia. In order to investigate the therapeutic potential of PlGF inhibition in murine BCR/ABL+ leukemia, we treated mice bearing leukemia induced by syngeneic BCR/ABL+ BaF3 cells with αPlGF, and found a significant prolongation of median survival by 18 days (N=9; P=0.015), compared to control antibodies. Encouraged by these positive results, we established models of imatinib-sensitive and imatinib-resistant (T315I mutant) CML by transducing primary bone marrow cells and subsequent transplantation into lethally irradiated recipient mice. Interestingly, also in these aggressive models, we found a significant prolongation of survival of diseased mice induced by blockade of PlGF compared to controls (median survival prolongation in wt BCR/ABL induced leukemia 5 days; N=11; P=0.002; in T315I mutant 4 days; N=12; P=0.039). Bone marrow histology and phenotypic analysis by FACS revealed decreased infiltration of spleen and bone marrow with leukemia cells (reduction in the bone marrow by 38% and in the spleen by 24%). In conclusion, these data indicate that PlGF represents a stromal derived factor promoting the progression of Ph+ leukemia, independent of BCR/ABL mutational status, and might represent a novel target produced by the leukemic stroma, potentially useful adjunct to BCR/ABL kinase inhibitors.


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