z-logo
Premium
Gamma‐tocotrienol as an effective agent in targeting prostate cancer stem cell‐like population
Author(s) -
Luk Sze Ue,
Yap Wei Ney,
Chiu YungTuen,
Lee Davy TW,
Ma Stephanie,
Lee Terence Kin Wah,
Vasireddy Raja S,
Wong YongChuan,
Ching Yick Pang,
Nelson Colleen,
Yap Yee Leng,
Ling MingTat
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
international journal of cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.475
H-Index - 234
eISSN - 1097-0215
pISSN - 0020-7136
DOI - 10.1002/ijc.25546
Subject(s) - prostate cancer , du145 , cancer stem cell , docetaxel , cancer research , cd44 , population , medicine , stem cell , cancer , cancer cell , prostate , oncology , lncap , biology , cell , microbiology and biotechnology , genetics , environmental health
Emerging evidence supports that prostate cancer originates from a rare subpopulation of cells, namely prostate cancer stem cells (CSCs). Conventional therapies for prostate cancer are believed to mainly target the majority of differentiated tumor cells but spare CSCs, which may account for the subsequent disease relapse after treatment. Therefore, successful elimination of CSCs may be an effective strategy to achieve complete remission from this disease. Gamma‐tocotrienols (γ‐T3) is one of the vitamin‐E constituents, which have been shown to have anticancer effects against a wide range of human cancers. Recently, we have reported that γ‐T3 treatment not only inhibits prostate cancer cell invasion but also sensitizes the cells to docetaxel‐induced apoptosis, suggesting that γ‐T3 may be an effective therapeutic agent against advanced stage prostate cancer. Here, we demonstrate for the first time that γ‐T3 can downregulate the expression of prostate CSC markers (CD133/CD44) in androgen‐independent prostate cancer cell lines (PC‐3 and DU145), as evident from Western blotting analysis. Meanwhile, the spheroid formation ability of the prostate cancer cells was significantly hampered by γ‐T3 treatment. In addition, pretreatment of PC‐3 cells with γ‐T3 was found to suppress tumor initiation ability of the cells. More importantly, although CD133‐enriched PC‐3 cells were highly resistant to docetaxel treatment, these cells were as sensitive to γ‐T3 treatment as the CD133‐depleted population. Our data suggest that γ‐T3 may be an effective agent in targeting prostate CSCs, which may account for its anticancer and chemosensitizing effects reported in previous studies.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here