4.7 Article

β-Pentagalloyl-Glucose Sabotages Pancreatic Cancer Cells and Ameliorates Cachexia in Tumor-Bearing Mice

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CHINESE MEDICINE
Volume 47, Issue 3, Pages 675-689

Publisher

WORLD SCIENTIFIC PUBL CO PTE LTD
DOI: 10.1142/S0192415X19500356

Keywords

Penta-O-Galloyl-beta-D-Glucose; Pancreatic Cancer; The Insulin Receptor; Hypoxia-Inducible Factor-1; Caveolin-1; Cachexia

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of China [81572318]

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Pancreatic cancer cells overexpress the insulin receptor (IR) and the insulin-like growth factor-1 receptor (IGF1R). Activating these receptors, insulin and insulin-like growth factor-1 increase the growth and glycolysis of pancreatic cancer cells. The high glycolysis in pancreatic cancer cells increases whole-body energy expenditure and is therefore involved in the pathogenesis of cancer cachexia. The antagonism of IR and IGF1R may sabotage pancreatic cancer cells and attenuate cancer cachexia. Previous studies have shown that the intracellular regulating system of IR/IGF1R may be functionally interrelated to another intracellular system whose master regulator is hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1). In this study, we investigated how the IR/IGF1R and HIF-1 systems are interrelated in pancreatic cancer cells. We also investigated whether a phytochemical, penta-O-galloyl-beta-D-glucose (beta-PGG), antagonizes IR/IGF1R, sabotages pancreatic cancer cells and alleviates cancer cachexia. We found in MiaPaCa2 pancreatic cancer cells that IR/IGF1R activation increased both the a-subunit of HIF-1 and caveolin-1. This result suggests that IR/IGF1R, HIF-1 alpha, and caveolin-1 may constitute a feed-forward loop to mediate the effect of IR/IGF1R activation. beta-PGG inhibited IR/IGF1R activity and decreased glycolytic enzymes in MiaPaCa2 and Panc-1 pancreatic cancer cells. When MiaPaCa2 cells were transplanted in athymic mice, their growth was inhibited by beta-PGG or by a HIF-1 alpha inhibitor, rhein. beta-PGG and rhein also decreased glycolytic enzymes in the tumor grafts and reduced liver gluconeogenesis, skeletal-muscle proteolysis and fat lipolysis in the tumor carriers. Cancer-induced body-weight loss, however, was prevented by beta-PGG but not rhein. In conclusion, beta-PGG combats pancreatic cancer cells and cures cancer cachexia.

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