Science leads the way...

 

                                                            We follow...

 
 
   

Scientific Researches On:

Betulinic Acid (Birch Bark Extract)

USA National Center for Biotechnology Information

 
 
 
Related Articles, Links
Click here to read
Identification of three triterpenoids in almond hulls.

Takeoka G, Dao L, Teranishi R, Wong R, Flessa S, Harden L, Edwards R.

Western Regional Research Center, Agricultural Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Albany, California 94710, USA. grt@pw.usda.gov

Three triterpenoids, betulinic acid, oleanolic acid, and ursolic acid, were isolated as their methyl esters (treatment with diazomethane) from diethyl ether extracts of almond hulls (Nonpareil variety) using flash chromatography and preparative high-performance liquid chromatography. The triterpenoids, which comprised approximately 1% of the hulls, were characterized using chromatographic and spectroscopic methods. These studies demonstrate that almond hulls are a rich source of these triterpenoids, which have reported anti-inflammatory, anti-HIV, and anti-cancer activities.

PMID: 10956130 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

 
Related Articles, Links
Click here to read
Mitochondrion as a novel target of anticancer chemotherapy.

Costantini P, Jacotot E, Decaudin D, Kroemer G.

Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Institut Gustave Roussy, Villejuif, France.

Mitochondrial membrane permeabilization is a critical event in the process leading to physiologic or chemotherapy-induced apoptosis (programmed cell death). This permeabilization event is, at least in part, under the control of the permeability transition pore complex (PTPC). Oncoproteins from the Bcl-2 family and tumor suppressor proteins from the Bax family interact with PTPC to inhibit or facilitate membrane permeabilization, respectively. Conventional chemotherapeutic agents elicit mitochondrial permeabilization in an indirect fashion by induction of endogenous effectors that are involved in the physiologic control of apoptosis. However, an increasing number of experimental anticancer drugs, including lonidamine, arsenite, betulinic acid, CD437, and several amphipathic cationic alpha-helical peptides, act directly on mitochondrial membranes and/or on the PTPC. Such agents may induce apoptosis in circumstances in which conventional drugs fail to act because endogenous apoptosis induction pathways, such as those involving p53, death receptors, or apical caspase activation, are disrupted. However, stabilization of the mitochondrial membrane by antiapoptotic Bcl-2-like proteins reduces the cytotoxic potential of most of these drugs. Targeting of specific PTPC components may overcome this Bcl-2-mediated apoptosis inhibition. One strategy involves cross-linking of critical redox-sensitive thiol groups within the PTPC; another involves the use of ligands to the mitochondrial benzodiazepine receptor. Thus, the design of mitochondrion-targeted cytotoxic drugs may constitute a novel strategy for overcoming apoptosis resistance.

Publication Types:


PMID: 10880547 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]


 
Related Articles, Links
Click here to read
Pharmacokinetics and tissue distribution of betulinic acid in CD-1 mice.

Udeani GO, Zhao GM, Geun Shin Y, Cooke BP, Graham J, Beecher CW, Kinghorn AD, Pezzuto JM.

Department of Pharmacy Practice, College of Pharmacy, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL 60612, USA. gudeani@uic.edu

Betulinic acid is a naturally occurring pentacyclic triterpenoid. Betulinic acid has recently been selected by the National Cancer Institute for addition into the RAID (Rapid Access to Intervention in Development) programme. The agent exhibits potential anti-tumour activity and functions in this regard via apoptosis. The objective of the present study was to determine the pharmacokinetics of betulinic acid in CD-1 mice. Serum samples were obtained at designed times after a single 250 or 500 mg/kg intraperitoneal (IP) dose of betulinic acid. Tissue samples (skin, heart, liver, spleen, kidney, lung, brain, colon, caecum, ovary, uterus, thymus, lymph node, bladder, perirenal fat, mammary gland and small intestine) were collected after betulinic acid administration (500 mg/kg). Betulinic acid was extracted with methylene chloride and quantitatively analysed by HPLC/MS. Oleanolic acid and madecassic acid were used as internal standards. Pharmacokinetic parameters were calculated using the WinNonlin pharmacokinetic software package. A two-compartment, first-order model was selected for pharmacokinetic modelling. The results showed that after IP 250 and 500 mg/kg betulinic acid, the serum concentrations reached peaks at 0.15 and 0.23 h, respectively. The 250 and 500 mg/kg above betulinic acid IP doses were found to have elimination half-lives of 11.5 and 11.8 h and total clearances of 13.6 and 13.5 L/kg/h, respectively. The pharmacokinetic parameters observed for IP betulinic acid 500 mg/kg in the skin of mice were as follows: k(a) (h(-1)) 0.257, k(10) (h(-1)) 0.234, t(1/2(alpha)) (h) 2.63, t(1/2(beta)) (h) 20.2, V (L/kg) 0.61, AUC (microg/h/mL) 3504, T(max) (h) 3.90 and C(max) (microg/mL) 300.9. The distribution of betulinic acid in tissues at 24 h post-IP administration in a descending order was as follows: perirenal fat, ovary, spleen, mammary gland, uterus, bladder, lymph node, liver, small intestine, caecum, lung, thymus, colon, kidney, skin, heart and brain. Copyright 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Publication Types:


PMID: 10870094 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]


 
Related Articles, Links
Click here to read
Effects of betulinic acid alone and in combination with irradiation in human melanoma cells.

Selzer E, Pimentel E, Wacheck V, Schlegel W, Pehamberger H, Jansen B, Kodym R.

Department of Radiotherapy and Radiobiology, University Hospital, Vienna, Austria. Edgar.Selzer@AKH-Wien.ac.at

Recently, betulinic acid was identified as a highly selective inhibitor of human melanoma growth and was reported to induce apoptosis in these cells. We have investigated the growth-inhibitory properties of this compound alone and in combination with ionizing radiation in a panel of established human melanoma cell lines as well as in normal human melanocytes. Betulinic acid strongly and consistently suppressed the growth and colony-forming ability of all human melanoma cell lines investigated. In combination with ionizing radiation the effect of betulinic acid on growth inhibition was additive in colony-forming assays. Betulinic acid also induced apoptosis in human melanoma cells as demonstrated by Annexin V binding and by the emergence of cells with apoptotic morphology. The growth-inhibitory action of betulinic acid was more pronounced in human melanoma cell lines than in normal human melanocytes. Notably, despite the induction of apoptosis, analysis of the expression of Bcl-2 family members in betulinic-acid-treated cells revealed that expression of the anti-apoptotic protein Mcl-1 was induced. Furthermore, the antiproliferative action of betulinic acid seemed to be independent of the p53 status. The properties of betulinic acid make it an interesting candidate, not only as a single agent but also in combination with radiotherapy. We conclude that the strictly additive mode of growth inhibition in combination with irradiation suggests that the two treatment modalities may function by inducing different cell death pathways or by affecting different target cell populations.

Publication Types:


PMID: 10771474 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]


 
Related Articles, Links

Determination of betulinic acid in mouse blood, tumor and tissue homogenates by liquid chromatography-electrospray mass spectrometry.

Shin YG, Cho KH, Chung SM, Graham J, Das Gupta TK, Pezzuto JM.

Program for Collaborative Research in the Pharmaceutical Sciences, College of Pharmacy, University of Illinois at Chicago, 60612, USA.

A rapid and sensitive high-performance liquid chromatography-electrospray MS method has been developed to determine tissue distribution of betulinic acid in mice. The method involved deproteinization of these samples with 2.5 volumes (v/w) of acetonitrile-ethanol (1:1) and then 5 microl aliquots of the supernatant were injected onto a C18 reversed-phase column coupled with an electrospray MS system. The mobile phase employed isocratic elution with 80% acetonitrile for 10 min; the flow-rate was 0.7 ml/min. The column effluent was analyzed by selected ion monitoring for the negative pseudo-molecular ion of betulinic acid [M-H]- at m/z 455. The limit of detection for betulinic acid in biological samples by this method was approximately 1.4 pg and the coefficients of variation of the assay (intra- and inter-day) were generally low (below 9.1%). When athymic mice bearing human melanoma were treated with betulinic acid (500 mg/kg, i.p.), distribution was as follows: tumor, 452.2 +/- 261.2 microg/g; liver, 233.9 +/- 80.3 microg/g; lung, 74.8 +/- 63.7 microg/g; kidney, 95.8 +/- 122.8 microg/g; blood, 1.8 +/- 0.5 microg/ml. No interference was noted due to endogenous substances. These methods of analysis should be of value in future studies related to the development and characterization of betulinic acid.

PMID: 10517355 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

 
Related Articles, Links

Betulinic acid: a new chemotherapeutic agent in the treatment of neuroectodermal tumors.

Fulda S, Jeremias I, Pietsch T, Debatin KM.

University Children's Hospital, Ulm, Germany.

We identified betulinic acid (BetA) as a new cytotoxic agent active against neuroectodermal tumor cells including neuroblastoma, medulloblastoma, glioblastoma and Ewing's sarcoma cells representing the most common solid tumors of childhood. BetA induced apoptosis independent of wild-type p53 protein and accumulation of death-inducing ligand/receptor systems such as CD95. BetA had a direct effect on mitochondria resulting in the release of soluble apoptogenic factors such as cytochrome c or AIF from mitochondria into the cytosol where they induced activation of caspases. Overexpression of the anti-apoptotic proteins Bcl-2 or Bcl-XL that blocked loss of the mitochondrial membrane potential and cytochrome c release from mitochondria conferred resistance to BetA at the level of mitochondrial dysfunction, protease activation and nuclear fragmentation. Neuroblastoma cells resistant to CD95- or doxorubicin-triggered apoptosis remained sensitive to treatment with BetA suggesting that BetA may bypass some forms of resistance. Moreover, BetA exhibited potent antitumor activity on primary tumor cell cultures from all neuroblastoma (4/4), all medulloblastoma (4/4) and most glioblastoma patients (20/24) ex vivo. These findings suggest that BetA may be a promising new agent in the treatment of neuroectodermal tumors in vivo.

Publication Types:


PMID: 10472570 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]


 
Related Articles, Links
Click here to read
Betulinic acid: a new cytotoxic agent against malignant brain-tumor cells.

Fulda S, Jeremias I, Steiner HH, Pietsch T, Debatin KM.

University Children's Hospital, Ulm, Germany.

Malignant brain tumors are the most common solid tumors in children. The overall prognosis for this group of patients is still poor, emphasizing the importance of more effective therapies. Betulinic acid (Bet A) has been described as a novel cytotoxic compound active against melanoma and neuroblastoma cells. Here we report that Bet A was active against medulloblastoma and glioblastoma cell lines. In addition, Bet A exerted cytotoxic activity against primary tumor cells cultured from patients in 4 of 4 medulloblastoma-tumor samples tested and in 20 of 24 glioblastoma-tumor samples. Since a small percentage of primary-glioblastoma-tumor cells (4/24) did not respond to Bet-A treatment, resistance to Bet A might occur. Induction of apoptosis by Bet A involved mitochondrial perturbations, since inhibition of the mitochondrial permeability transition by the mitochondrion-specific inhibitor bongkrekic acid (BA) reduced Bet-A-induced apoptosis. In addition, mitochondria undergoing Bet-A-induced permeability transition triggered DNA fragmentation in isolated nuclei. Cytochrome c was released from mitochondria of Bet-A-treated cells, and might be involved in activation of caspases. Following treatment with Bet A, caspase-8, caspase-3 and PARP were proteolytically processed. Inhibition of caspase cleavage by the broad-range caspase inhibitor zVAD.fmk strongly reduced Bet-A-induced apoptosis, indicating that apoptosis was mediated by activation of caspases. Since Bet A did not exhibit cytotoxicity against murine neuronal cells in vitro, these findings suggest that Bet A may be a promising new agent for the treatment of medulloblastoma and glioblastoma cells that clearly warrants further pre-clinical and clinical evaluation.

Publication Types:


PMID: 10399962 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]


 
Related Articles, Links
Click here to read
Glucosidation of betulinic acid by Cunninghamella species.

Chatterjee P, Pezzuto JM, Kouzi SA.

Division of Basic Pharmaceutical Sciences, School of Pharmacy, Northeast Louisiana University, Monroe, Louisiana 71209, USA.

Microbial transformation of the antimelanoma agent betulinic acid (1) was studied. Preparative scale biotransformation with resting-cell suspensions of Cunninghamella species NRRL 5695 resulted in the production of a fungal metabolite of 1, which has been characterized as 28-O-beta-D-glucopyranosyl 3beta-hydroxy-lup-20(29)-en-28-oate (2) based on spectral and enzymic data. The in vitro cytotoxicity assay of metabolite 2 revealed no activity against several human melanoma cell lines.

Publication Types:


PMID: 10346964 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]


 
Related Articles, Links
Click here to read
Betulinic acid-induced apoptosis in glioma cells: A sequential requirement for new protein synthesis, formation of reactive oxygen species, and caspase processing.

Wick W, Grimmel C, Wagenknecht B, Dichgans J, Weller M.

Laboratory of Molecular Neuro-Oncology, Department of Neurology, University of Tübingen, School of Medicine, Tübingen, Germany.

Betulinic acid (BA), a pentacyclic triterpene, is an experimental cytotoxic agent for malignant melanoma. Here, we show that BA triggers apoptosis in five human glioma cell lines. BA-induced apoptosis requires new protein, but not RNA, synthesis, is independent of p53, and results in p21 protein accumulation in the absence of a cell cycle arrest. BA-induced apoptosis involves the activation of caspases that cleave poly(ADP ribose)polymerase. Interactions of death ligand/receptor pairs of the CD95/CD95 ligand family do not mediate BA-induced caspase activation. BA enhances the levels of BAX and BCL-2 proteins but does not alter the levels of BCL-xS or BCL-xL. Ectopic expression of BCL-2 prevents BA-induced caspase activation, DNA fragmentation, and cell death. Furthermore, BA induces the formation of reactive oxygen species that are essential for BA-triggered cell death. The generation of reactive oxygen species is blocked by BCL-2 and requires new protein synthesis but is unaffected by caspase inhibitors, suggesting that BA toxicity sequentially involves new protein synthesis, formation of reactive oxygen species, and activation of crm-A-insensitive caspases.

PMID: 10336521 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

 
Related Articles, Links
Click here to read
Preparation of amino acid conjugates of betulinic acid with activity against human melanoma.

Jeong HJ, Chai HB, Park SY, Kim DS.

Department of Medicinal Chemistry and Pharmacognosy, College of Pharmacy, University of Illinois at Chicago, 60612, USA.

Betulinic acid has been coupled with a series of amino acids at C-28 carboxylic acid position and the toxicity of the derivatives has been evaluated against cultured human melanoma (MEL-2) and human epidermoid carcinoma of the mouth (KB) cell lines. A number of amino acid conjugates of betulinic acid showed improved water solubility as well as selective cytotoxicity. This investigation demonstrates that amino acid conjugates of betulinic acid can produce potentially important derivatives, which may be developed as antitumor agents.

Publication Types:


PMID: 10328313 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]


 
Related Articles, Links
Click here to read
Synthesis of betulinic acid derivatives with activity against human melanoma.

Kim DS, Pezzuto JM, Pisha E.

Department of Medicinal Chemistry and Pharmacognosy (m/c 833), College of Pharmacy, University of Illinois at Chicago 60612-7231, USA.

Betulinic acid has been modified at C-3, C-20, and C-28 positions and the toxicity of the derivatives has been evaluated against cultured human melanoma (MEL-2) and human epidermoid carcinoma of the mouth (KB) cell lines. This preliminary investigation demonstrates that simple modifications of the parent structure of betulinic acid can produce potentially important derivatives, which may be developed as antitumor drugs.

Publication Types:


PMID: 9873420 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]


 
Related Articles, Links
Click here to read
Comment on:


Correspondence re: S. Fulda et al., Betulinic acid triggers CD95 (Apo1/Fas)- and p53-independent apoptosis via activation of caspases in neuroectodermal tumors. Cancer Res., 57: 4956-4964, 1997.

Rieber M, Rieber MS.

Publication Types:


PMID: 9865749 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]


 
Related Articles, Links
Click here to read
Activation of mitochondria and release of mitochondrial apoptogenic factors by betulinic acid.

Fulda S, Scaffidi C, Susin SA, Krammer PH, Kroemer G, Peter ME, Debatin KM.

University Children's Hospital, Prittwitzstrasse 43, D-89075 Ulm, Germany.

Different classes of anticancer drugs may trigger apoptosis by acting on different subcellular targets and by activating distinct signaling pathways. Here, we report that betulinic acid (BetA) is a prototype cytotoxic agent that triggers apoptosis by a direct effect on mitochondria. In isolated mitochondria, BetA directly induces loss of transmembrane potential independent of a benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp-fluoromethyl ketone-inhibitable caspase. This is inhibited by bongkrekic acid, an agent that stabilizes the permeability transition pore complex. Mitochondria undergoing BetA-induced permeability transition mediate cleavage of caspase-8 (FLICE/MACH/Mch5) and caspase-3 (CPP32/Yama) in a cell-free system. Soluble factors such as cytochrome c or apoptosis-inducing factor released from BetA-treated mitochondria are sufficient for cleavage of caspases and nuclear fragmentation. Addition of cytochrome c to cytosolic extracts results in cleavage of caspase-3, but not of caspase-8. However, supernatants of mitochondria, which have undergone permeability transition, and partially purified apoptosis-inducing factor activate both caspase-8 and caspase-3 in cytosolic extracts and suffice to activate recombinant caspase-8. These findings show that induction of mitochondrial permeability transition alone is sufficient to trigger the full apoptosis program and that some cytotoxic drugs such as BetA may induce apoptosis via a direct effect on mitochondria.

Publication Types:


PMID: 9852046 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]


 
Related Articles, Links
Click here to read
Preparation and cytotoxic effect of ceanothic acid derivatives.

Lee SS, Chen WC, Huang CF, Su Y.

School of Pharmacy, College of Medicine, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan, Republic of China. shoeilee@ha.mc.ntu.edu.tw

Six ceanothane and 1-norceanothane derivatives (1, 2, 8-11) were prepared from ceanothic acid dibenzyl ester. These ring-A homologues of betulinic acid exhibited cytotoxic effects. Among these, 1-decarboxy-3-oxo-ceanothic acid (2) was found to be the most cytotoxic against OVCAR-3 and HeLa cancer cell lines, with an IC50 of 2.8 and 6.6 microg/mL, respectively, and an IC50 of 11.3 microg/mL against normal cell line FS-5.

Publication Types:


PMID: 9834149 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]


 
Related Articles, Links
Click here to read
Molecular ordering of apoptosis induced by anticancer drugs in neuroblastoma cells.

Fulda S, Susin SA, Kroemer G, Debatin KM.

University Children's Hospital, Ulm, Germany.

Apoptosis mediated by anticancer drugs may involve activation of death-inducing ligand/receptor systems such as CD95 (APO-1/Fas), cleavage of caspases, and perturbance of mitochondrial functions. We investigated the sequence of these events in SHEP neuroblastoma cells transfected with Bcl-2 or Bcl-X(L) using two different drugs, namely, doxorubicin (Doxo), which activates the CD95/CD95 ligand (CD95-L) system, and betulinic acid (Bet A), which does not enhance the expression of CD95 or CD95-L and which, as shown here, directly targets mitochondria. Apoptosis induced by both drugs was inhibited by Bcl-2 or Bcl-X(L) overexpression or by bongkrekic acid, an agent that stabilizes mitochondrial membrane barrier function, suggesting a critical role for mitochondria. After Doxo treatment, enhanced CD95/CD95-L expression and caspase-8 activation were not blocked by Bcl-2 or Bcl-X(L) and were found in cells with a mitochondrial transmembrane potential (delta psi(m)) that was still normal (delta psi(m)high cells). In marked contrast, after Bet A treatment, caspase-8 activation occurred in a Bcl-2- or Bcl-X(L)-inhibitable fashion and was confined to cells that had lost their delta psi(m) (delta psi(m)low cells). Mitochondria from cells treated with either Doxo or Bet A induced cleavage of both caspase-8 and caspase-3 in cytosolic extracts. Thus, caspase-8 activation may occur upstream or downstream of mitochondria, depending on the apoptosis-initiating stimulus. In contrast to caspase-8, cleavage of caspase-3 or poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase was always restricted to delta psi(m)low cells, downstream of the Bcl-2- or Bcl-X(L)-controlled checkpoint of apoptosis. Cytochrome c, released from mitochondria undergoing permeability transition, activated caspase-3 but not caspase-8 in a cell-free system. However, both caspases were activated by apoptosis-inducing factor, indicating that the mechanism of caspase-8 activation differed from that of caspase-3 activation. Taken together, our findings demonstrate that perturbance of mitochondrial function constitutes a central coordinating event in drug-induced cell death.

Publication Types:


PMID: 9766678 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]


 
Related Articles, Links

Induction of p53 without increase in p21WAF1 in betulinic acid-mediated cell death is preferential for human metastatic melanoma.

Rieber M, Strasberg Rieber M.

IVIC, Tumor Cell Biology Laboratory, Caracas, Venezuela. mrieber@pasteur.ivic.ve

Because betulinic acid was recently described as a melanoma-specific inducer of apoptosis, we investigated whether this agent was comparably effective against metastatic tumors and those in which metastatic ability and 92-kD gelatinase activity had been decreased by introduction of a normal chromosome 6. Human metastatic C8161 melanoma cells showed greater DNA fragmentation and growth arrest and earlier loss of viability in response to betulinic acid than their non-metastatic C8161/neo 6.3 counterpart. These effects involved induction of p53 without activation of p21WAF1 and were synergized by bromodeoxyuridine in metastatic Mel Juso, with no comparable responses in non-metastatic Mel Juso/neo 6 cells. Our data suggest that betulinic acid exerts its inhibitory effect partly by increasing p53 without a comparable effect on p21WAF1.

Publication Types:


PMID: 9628583 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]


 
Related Articles, Links
Click here to read
Betulinic acid induces apoptosis in human neuroblastoma cell lines.

Schmidt ML, Kuzmanoff KL, Ling-Indeck L, Pezzuto JM.

Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, University of Illinois at Chicago 60612-7324, USA.

Neuroblastoma has long been recognized to show spontaneous regression during fetal development and in the majority of stage 4s infants < 1 year of age with disseminated disease. Stage 4s disease regresses with no chemotherapy in 50% of the patients. The mechanism by which this occurs is not understood but may be programmed cell death or apoptosis. Betulinic acid (BA) has been reported to induce apoptosis in human melanoma with in vitro and in vivo model systems. Melanoma, like neuroblastoma, is derived from the neural crest cell. We hypothesised that neuroblastoma cells have the machinery for programmed cell death and that apoptosis could be induced by betulinic acid. Nine human neuroblastoma cell lines were treated in vitro with BA at concentrations of 0-20 micrograms/ml for 0-6 days. Profound morphological changes were noted within 3 days. Cells withdrew their axonic-like extensions, became non-adherent and condensed into irregular dense spheroids typical of apoptotic cell death (ED50 = 14-17 micrograms/ml). DNA fragmentation analysis showed ladder formation in the 100-1200 bp region in 3/3 neuroblastoma cell lines treated with BA for 24-72 h. Thus, apparently BA does induce AP in neuroblastoma in vitro. This model will be utilised to investigate the role of apoptosis-related genes in neuroblastoma proliferation and to determine the therapeutic efficacy of BA in neuroblastoma in vivo.

PMID: 9516843 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

 
Related Articles, Links
Click here to read
Comment in:


Betulinic acid triggers CD95 (APO-1/Fas)- and p53-independent apoptosis via activation of caspases in neuroectodermal tumors.

Fulda S, Friesen C, Los M, Scaffidi C, Mier W, Benedict M, Nuñez G, Krammer PH, Peter ME, Debatin KM.

Division of Hematology/Oncology, University Children's Hospital, German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg.

Betulinic acid (BA), a melanoma-specific cytotoxic agent, induced apoptosis in neuroectodermal tumors, such as neuroblastoma, medulloblastoma, and Ewing's sarcoma, representing the most common solid tumors of childhood. BA triggered an apoptosis pathway different from the one previously identified for standard chemotherapeutic drugs. BA-induced apoptosis was independent of CD95-ligand/receptor interaction and accumulation of wild-type p53 protein, but it critically depended on activation of caspases (interleukin 1beta-converting enzyme/Ced-3-like proteases). FLICE/MACH (caspase-8), considered to be an upstream protease in the caspase cascade, and the downstream caspase CPP32/YAMA/Apopain (caspase-3) were activated, resulting in cleavage of the prototype substrate of caspases PARP. The broad-spectrum peptide inhibitor benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp-fluoromethylketone, which blocked cleavage of FLICE and PARP, also completely abrogated BA-triggered apoptosis. Cleavage of caspases was preceded by disturbance of mitochondrial membrane potential and by generation of reactive oxygen species. Overexpression of Bcl-2 and Bcl-XL conferred resistance to BA at the level of mitochondrial dysfunction, protease activation, and nuclear fragmentation. This suggested that mitochondrial alterations were involved in BA-induced activation of caspases. Furthermore, Bax and Bcl-xs, two death-promoting proteins of the Bcl-2 family, were up-regulated following BA treatment. Most importantly, neuroblastoma cells resistant to CD95- and doxorubicin-mediated apoptosis were sensitive to treatment with BA, suggesting that BA may bypass some forms of drug resistance. Because BA exhibited significant antitumor activity on patients' derived neuroblastoma cells ex vivo, BA may be a promising new agent for the treatment of neuroectodermal tumors in vivo.

Publication Types:


PMID: 9354463 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]


 
Related Articles, Links

Enhanced cytotoxicity of some triterpenes toward leukemia L1210 cells cultured in low pH media: possibility of a new mode of cell killing.

Noda Y, Kaiya T, Kohda K, Kawazoe Y.

Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Nagoya City University, Japan.

Several triterpenes were tested for cytotoxicity by our contrived primary screening method using resting or dormant leukemia L1210 cells after 3 d-preculture without medium change. Some triterpenes were found to be more cytotoxic toward the 3 d-precultured resting cells than toward the growing cells in a fresh medium. These triterpenes are distinguished by highly selective cytotoxicity toward the starved resting cells unlike common anticancer agents. The highest selectivity was shown by betulinic acid, the ratio of its IC50 values toward the growing versus resting cells amounting to 175. It is suggested that this selective cytotoxicity is attributable to low pH (< or = 6.8) of the medium. It is noteworthy that betulinic acid is not cytotoxic at all in media of ordinary pH (> or = 7.0) even after a 48-h exposure. Betulinic acid might be promising as an antitumor agent toward solid tumors because the interior pH of tumor tissues is generally lower than in normal tissues.

Publication Types:


PMID: 9353895 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]


 
Related Articles, Links

Discovery of betulinic acid as a selective inhibitor of human melanoma that functions by induction of apoptosis.

Pisha E, Chai H, Lee IS, Chagwedera TE, Farnsworth NR, Cordell GA, Beecher CW, Fong HH, Kinghorn AD, Brown DM, et al.

Department of Medicinal Chemistry and Pharmacognosy, College of Pharmacy, University of Illinois at Chicago 60612, USA.

As a result of bioassay-guided fractionation, betulinic acid, a pentacyclic triterpene, was identified as a melanoma-specific cytotoxic agent. In follow-up studies conducted with athymic mice carrying human melanomas, tumour growth was completely inhibited without toxicity. As judged by a variety of cellular responses, antitumour activity was mediated by the induction of apoptosis. Betulinic acid is inexpensive and available in abundant supply from common natural sources, notably the bark of white birch trees. The compound is currently undergoing preclinical development for the treatment or prevention of malignant melanoma.

Publication Types:


PMID: 7489361 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

 

Back      Next

 

 

 

   

 

investors | career | contact us

 
Terms of Use | Privacy Statement Copyright © 2000-2009 Partnec Biotechnology LLC  All Rights Reserved.