4.6 Article

Reactive Oxygen Species Mediate Isoalantolactone-Induced Apoptosis in Human Prostate Cancer Cells

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 18, Issue 8, Pages 9382-9396

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules18089382

Keywords

prostate cancer; isoalantolactone; apoptosis; reactive oxygen species

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology [2010DFA31430]
  2. Ministry of Education of China [NCET-10-0316, 10SSXT147]
  3. Jilin Provincial Science & Technology Department [20130521010JH, YYZX201241, 20070719, 200905116]
  4. Changchun Science & Technology Department [2011114-11GH29]
  5. National Natural Science Foundation of China [30871301]

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Isoalantolactone, a medicinal plant-derived natural compound, is known to induce apoptosis in various cancer cell lines. However, its effect on apoptosis in prostate cancer cells has not been addressed. Thus, we examined the effects of isoalantolactone on prostate cancer cells. It was found that isoalantolactone inhibits growth of both androgen-sensitive (LNCaP) as well as androgen-independent (PC3 and DU-145) prostate cancer cells in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, our results indicate that isoalantolactone-induced apoptosis in prostate cancer PC3 cells is associated with the generation of ROS and dissipation of mitochondrial membrane potential (Delta psi m). In addition, isoalantolactone triggers apoptosis in prostate cancer cells via up-regulation of Bax, down-regulation of Bcl-2, survivin, and significant activation of caspase-3. Isoalantolactone-induced apoptosis is markedly abrogated when the cells were pretreated with N-acetylcysteine (NAC), a specific ROS inhibitor, suggesting that the apoptosis-inducing effect of isoalantolactone in prostate cancer cells is mediated by reactive oxygen species. These findings indicate that isoalantolactone induces reactive oxygen species-dependent apoptosis in prostate cancer cells via a novel mechanism involving inhibition of survivin and provide the rationale for further in vivo and preclinical investigation of isoalantolactone against human prostate cancer.

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