4.7 Article

Diosgenin targets Akt-mediated prosurvival signaling in human breast cancer cells

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 125, Issue 4, Pages 961-967

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ijc.24419

Keywords

diosgenin; PI3K/Akt/NF-kappa B signaling; cell cycle; apoptosis; breast cancer

Categories

Funding

  1. Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In recent years, Akt signaling has gained recognition for its functional role in more aggressive, therapy-resistant malignancies. As it is frequently constitutively active in cancer cells, several drugs are being investigated for their ability to inhibit Akt signaling. The purpose of this study is to determine effect of diosgenin (fenugreek), a dietary compound on AM signaling and its downstream targets on estrogen receptor positive (ER+) and estrogen receptor negative (ER-) breast cancer (BCa) cells. Diosgenin inhibits pAkt expression and Akt kinase activity without affecting PI3 kinase levels, resulting in the inhibition of its downstream targets, NF-kappa B, Bcl-2, survivin and XIAP. The Raf/MEK/ERK pathway, another functional downstream target of Akt, was inhibited by diosgenin in ER+ but not in ER- BCa cells. Additionally, we found that diosgenin caused G1 cell cycle arrest by down-regulating cyclin D1, cdk-2 and cdk-4 expression in both ER+ and ER- BCa cells resulting in the inhibition of cell proliferation and induction of apoptosis. Interestingly, no significant toxicity was seen in the normal breast epithelial cells (MCF-10A) following treatment with diosgenin. Additionally, in vivo tumor studies indicate diosgenin significantly inhibits tumor growth in both MCF-7 and MDA-31 xenografts in nude mice. Thus, these results suggest that diosgenin might prove to be a potential chemotherapeutic agent for the treatment of BCa. (C) 2009 UICC

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available