4.4 Article

Studies on molecular mechanisms of growth inhibitory effects of thymoquinone against prostate cancer cells: role of reactive oxygen species

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 235, Issue 6, Pages 751-760

Publisher

SOC EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY MEDICINE
DOI: 10.1258/ebm.2010.009369

Keywords

thymoquinone; prostate cancer cells; reactive oxygen species; androgen receptor

Funding

  1. Louisiana Cancer Research Consortium (LCRC)
  2. Department of Defense (DOD)

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Thymoquinone (TO), an active ingredient of black seed oil (Nigella Sativa), has been shown to possess antineoplastic activity against a variety of experimental tumors. However, the precise mechanism of action of TO is not known. We investigated the mechanism of action of TO in androgen receptor (AR)-independent (C4-2B) and AR naive (PC-3) prostate cancer cells, as models of aggressive prostate cancers. Exposure (24-48 h) to TO (25-150 mu mol/L) inhibited the growth of both C4-2B and PC-3 cells, with IC(50) values of approximately 50 and 80 mu mol/L, respectively. Within one hour, TO increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels (3-fold) and decreased glutathione (GSH) levels (60%) in both cell types. Pretreatment with N-acetylcysteine (NAC) inhibited both TO-induced ROS generation and growth inhibition. TO did not increase the activity of caspases and the caspase inhibitor, z-VAD-FMK did not decrease TO-induced apoptosis. Furthermore, although TO treatment resulted in the activation of Jun kinase (JNK), pretreatment with the JNK inhibitor, SP600125, did not protect cells from TO. However, TO significantly up-regulated the expressions of growth arrest and DNA damage inducible gene (GADD45 alpha) and apoptosis-inducing factor-1 and down-regulated the expressions of several Bc12-related proteins, such as BAG-1, Bcl2, Bcl2A1, Bcl2L1 and BID. In C4-2B cells, TO dose dependently inhibited both total and nuclear AR levels (4-5 fold) and AR-directed transcriptional activity (10-12 fold). Interestingly, this suppressive effect on AR was not prevented by NAC, which clearly suggested that TO-induced cytotoxicity is not due to changes in AR regulation. These data suggest that TO-induced cell death is primarily due to increased ROS generation and decreased GSH levels, and is independent of AR activity.

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