Posted on 01/19/2005 8:06:00 PM PST by Coleus
Take the Right form of Vitamin E |
Among the various forms of vitamin E, researchers discovered that one often-overlooked form, gamma-tocopherol, may have value as an anti-cancer agent. Gamma-tocopherol occurs naturally in plant seeds such as:
According to a study, gamma-tocopherol inhibited the production of lab-cultured human prostate cancer cells. And although the presence of gamma-tocopherol caused cell death by interrupting the synthesis of sphingolipids (certain fatty molecules, which are important components of cell membranes), it left healthy human prostate cells unaffected. As researchers increased the amount of gamma-tocopherol, cancer cells slowed in growth and healthy cells grew normally. "This is the first time gamma-tocopherol has been shown to induce death in lab-grown human cancer cells while leaving healthy cells alone," said the head researcher of the study. Combining Forms of Vitamin E Since gamma-tocopherol does not appear in most manufactured nutritional supplements, researchers have suggested combining it with another form of vitamin E: Alpha-tocopherol. Alpha-tocopherol is the major form of vitamin E found in the body and, in contrast to gamma-tocopherol, is found in most manufactured nutritional supplements. It has justifiably earned a good reputation as an antioxidant, which helps fight against damage caused by unwanted free radicals. Thus, it is better to supplement a diet with mixed forms of vitamin E, as together they will enhance the positive effects found in each. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences December 21, 2004;101(51):17825-17830 Free Full-Text Article
|
*Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute, 5700 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland, CA 94609; and Division of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720
Contributed by Bruce N. Ames, November 9, 2004
Abstract |
---|
Top Abstract Materials and Methods Results Discussion References |
---|
apoptosis | ceramide | dihydroceramide | -tocopherol | tocotrienol
Vitamin E is a generic term for at least eight structurally related molecules: -tocopherol (T), -tocopherol, -tocopherol (T), -tocopherol (T), -tocotrienol, -tocotrienol, -tocotrienol (TE), and -tocotrienol. Among them, T is the predominant form of vitamin E in plasma and tissues and is the form that has drawn most attention in the past. Benefit from T for cancer prevention has been suggested in some studies (1), but contradictory results exist in both animal and human intervention studies (2-5). Recently, studies by us and others have indicated that other forms of vitamin E appear to have unique properties that are not shared by T but may be important to human health (6). For instance, T, the major form of vitamin E in U.S. diets, but not T, exhibits anti-inflammatory activities by inhibiting cyclooxygenasecatalyzed prostaglandin E2 formation in cell cultures and animals (7, 8). T, unlike T, is strongly nucleophilic and thus is more efficient than T in trapping reactive nitrogen species (9-11). Consistently, the administration of -enriched tocopherols significantly lowered C-reactive protein, a biomarker of inflammation, in hemodialysis patients, but the administration of -enriched tocopherols did not (12).
Recently, Helzlsouer et al. (13) reported that men in the highest quintile of plasma concentration of T had a 5-fold reduced risk of prostate cancer compared with those in the lowest quintile. In the same study, significant protective effects of high concentrations of selenium and T were observed only when T concentrations were high. Consistently, T and its metabolite, 2,7,8-trimethyl-2-(-carboxyethyl)-6-hydroxychroman, is more potent than T in inhibiting prostate cancer cell growth by the down-regulation of cyclins (14, 15). T is also stronger than T in the induction of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor- in colon cancer cell lines (16). In addition, various tocotrienols have been shown to cause death in breast cancer cell lines (17) and exhibit antitumor effects in animals (18). These studies point toward the potential use of tocopherols and tocotrienols as anticancer agents, but the molecular mechanism behind the observed effects has not been elucidated.
In this study, we investigated the antiproliferation and proapoptotic effect of T, and its combination with other forms of vitamin E, in prostate cancer cells (LNCaP and PC-3) and lung cancer cells (A549) by using a prostate epithelial cell (PrEC) as the normal counterpart. We found that T dose-dependently inhibited proliferation of LNCaP and PC-3 but had no effect on PrEC. T and its combination with T induced apoptosis in LNCaP by interrupting de novo synthesis of sphingolipids.
Materials and Methods |
---|
Top Abstract Materials and Methods Results Discussion References |
---|
Cell Culture. Human prostate cancer cell lines (androgen-resistant PC-3 and androgen-sensitive LNCaP) and lung cancer cells (A549) were obtained from the American Type Culture Collection (Manassas, VA). These cells were maintained routinely in RPMI medium 1640/10% FBS. At the time of the experiments, cells were seeded in RPMI medium 1640/10% FBS at a density of 1.8-2.5 x 104 cells per well in 24-well plates. Twenty-four (PC-3 and A549) or 48 (LNCaP) h later, media were replaced with fresh RPMI medium 1640 containing 1-10% FBS and vitamin E forms. Human prostate epithelial cells, PrEC, were obtained from Clonetics (San Diego) and maintained in prostate epithelial cell growth medium (Clonetics). During experiments, PrEC cells were seeded at the same density (1.8-2.5 x 104) and treated with tocopherols in epithelial cell-growth medium.
Tocopherol Preparation. Tocopherols were dissolved in DMSO at 50-100 mM and then diluted into BSA (5 mg/ml). During preparation, samples were kept cold, and exposure to light was avoided. The final concentration of DMSO in all samples did not exceed 0.15%. In controls, the corresponding amounts of DMSO and BSA were added.
Evaluation of Cell Viability by MTT Assays. The number of viable cells was quantified by the estimation of dehydrogenase activity that reduces MTT to form an insoluble product, which was dissolved in DMSO and measured at 570 nm (19).
DNA Fragmentation Assay by Electrophoresis. Cells (5 x 105) were seeded in 10-cm dishes for 24-48 h in RPMI medium 1640/10% FBS and then treated with tocopherols at various concentrations for 2-4 days. Cells were harvested by collecting the floating and attached cells that were briefly trypsinized. DNA was isolated according to a previously published protocol established by Herrmann et al. (20), with minor modifications. The precipitated DNAs were separated on 1.2% agarose gels and visualized by ethidium bromide staining.
Evaluation of Apoptosis by Annexin V and Propidium Iodide Staining. Both floating and attached cells were collected by brief trypsinization. Cells were stained with an Annexin-V-Fluos staining kit (Roche Applied Science, Indianapolis), and apoptosis was evaluated by using FACSort (Becton Dickinson) with CELLQUEST PRO 5.1.1 (BD Biosciences). The externalization of phosphatidylserine of the plasma membrane, a marker of apoptosis, is recognized by annexin V conjugated with fluorescein; propidium iodide penetrates into the plasma membrane of cells that have lost membrane integrity.
Isolation of Cytosolic Fraction. Cells were homogenized in the extraction buffer (220 mM mannitol/68 mM sucrose/50 mM Pipes-KOH/50 mM KCl/5 mM EGTA/2 mM MgCl2/protease inhibitors) (21). The homogenate was centrifuged at 400 x g at 4°C for 10 min, and the supernatant was further centrifuged at 10,000 x g for 10 min; the resultant supernatant was used as the cytosolic fraction. The protein amount was determined with a bicinchoninic acid (BCA) protein assay kit (Pierce).
Western Blot. Cells were lysed in Tris-EDTA/1% SDS/1 mM DTT with protease inhibitor cocktails (Sigma), and the resulting solution was heated at 95°C for 5 min. To measure Akt phosphorylation, cells were collected by scraping. After a brief centrifugation, cell pellets were lysed in lysis buffer containing 2 mM Na3VO4. Equal amounts of protein (10-25 µg) were loaded on 10-12% precast SDS/PAGE gels (Bio-Rad). Resolved proteins were transferred onto a poly(vinylidene difluoride) membrane (Millipore) and probed by antibodies. Membranes were exposed to chemiluminescent reagent (PerkinElmer) and visualized on Kodak film with an M35A X-Omat processor (Kodak).
Lipid Extraction. Lipids were extracted as described in refs. 22 and 23. Briefly, cell pellets were resuspended in chloroform/methanol/1 M hydrochloric acid (100:100:1, vol/vol), vortexed, and tip-sonicated for 20 s. A two-phase separation was obtained after adding 0.25 vol of 1 M sodium chloride and then vortexing and centrifuging. The lower organic phase was recovered. Ten percent organic phase was used to determine total choline-containing phospholipids by an enzymatic colorimetric assay (Wako Chemicals, Neuss, Germany). The remaining 90% organic phase was dried in a speedvac and then resuspended in 0.5 ml of 1 M potassium hydroxide in methanol with added C16-sphingosine (250-500 pmol) as the internal standard. Samples were incubated at 90°C for 1 h to completely convert ceramide to sphingoid bases. Lipids were then extracted, dried, and kept at -20°C until further analysis. Endogenous free sphingoid bases were measured after mild alkaline hydrolysis (with 0.1 M sodium hydroxide in methanol at 37°C for 1 h) to prevent ceramide hydrolysis and then extracted by using the procedure described above.
Measurement of Sphingolipid Intermediates by Using HPLC with Fluorescent Detection. Sphingolipid intermediates were derivatized by using o-phthalaldehyde to form fluorescent compounds that were separated by HPLC and quantified with a fluorescence detector (22, 23).
Results |
---|
Top Abstract Materials and Methods Results Discussion References |
---|
|
|
Combinations of Vitamin E Forms Exhibited Synergistic or Additive Effects. To evaluate whether various forms of vitamin E act synergistically, we examined the combinations of T with T, T, or TE that are rich in tissues and/or diets (30). Combinations of T (25 µM) and T (10 µM) or T (25 µM) and TE (2.5 µM) inhibited proliferation additively or synergistically (Fig. 3). Interestingly, these combinations exhibited antiproliferative potency similar to that of T alone at 50 µM. T, which is the most abundant vitamin E form in tissues and supplements, did not significantly enhance or counteract the inhibitory effect from T alone (Fig. 3B).
|
|
|
|
T-Induced Cell Death Was Mediated by Sphingolipid Intermediates. In search of the upstream signaling pathways that are responsible for T-induced biological effects, we found that T treatment had no significant effect on BCl-2, BCl-xL, or P53 expression at the studied time points, i.e., 12, 24 and 48 h (unpublished data). T did not appear to activate caspase 8 (unpublished data), which ruled out the potential involvement of the death receptor-regulated pathway. In addition, T-induced cell death did not appear to be mediated by the phosphatidylinositol 3 kinase (PI3K)-regulated pathway, because T treatment (12-48 h) did not affect the phosphorylation of Akt (data not shown), a key downstream target of PI3K.
On the other hand, coincubation with myriocin or fumonisin B1, the specific inhibitors of serine palmitoyltransferase or dihydroceramide synthase (Scheme 1), respectively, resulted in a significant protection against apoptosis, as indicated by DNA fragmentation (Fig. 7A) and MTT assay; T-treated cells with fumonisin or myriocin showed 65 ± 10% or 85 ± 11% viability, respectively, vs. 41 ± 11% for T alone. These observations strongly suggest that T-induced cell death is mediated by sphingolipid intermediates, which are believed to be important mediators of signaling-cell survival and death (31). The importance of sphingolipid intermediates in T-mediated cell death is further confirmed by the observation that myriocin largely prevented T-induced cytochrome c release, cleavage of PARP, and the formation of active caspase 3 (Fig. 7B).
|
|
|
Discussion |
---|
Top Abstract Materials and Methods Results Discussion References |
---|
Sphingolipids, which are important membrane components, are generated by condensation of palmitoyl-CoA and serine (Scheme 1). Ceramide is the common intermediate for the formation of complex sphingolipids, including sphingomyelin and glycosphingolipids. Recently, ceramide has been proposed as a mediator in regulating stress response, particularly apoptosis (31-33). In addition, other sphingolipid intermediates, such as sphingosine, sphingosine-1-phosphate and dihydrosphingosine, have been shown to mediate cell survival (32, 34, 35). The use of inhibitors of the enzymes in the de novo synthesis pathway has provided insight regarding the importance of sphingolipid intermediates in cell fate. For instance, fumonisin, which inhibits dihydroceramide synthase, has been shown to attenuate apoptosis induced by varieties of chemical agents and other stresses (36, 37). Myriocin, the specific inhibitor of serine palmitoyl-CoA transferase, recently has been reported to block CD95-mediated apoptosis of T cells (35). In our study, fumonisin and myriosin partially and completely block T-induced cell death, which strongly suggests that sphingolipid intermediates play an important role in T-mediated effects.
Surprisingly, a large amount of dihydroceramide accumulation was observed before apoptosis, whereas total ceramide increased only when apoptosis was substantial. In addition to T, certain other forms of vitamin E also caused a significant enhancement of dihydroceramide (unpublished data). Our findings are different from some previously published studies that showed a moderate increase of ceramide preceding apoptosis (31). These results, however, have been questioned by several recent studies that failed to observe an enhancement of ceramide until relatively late stages of apoptosis (38, 39). Few studies have reported the status of dihydroceramide during apoptosis. Interestingly, Tserng and Griffin (40) recently reported the same pattern of dihydroceramide, but not ceramide, accumulation along with cell death when HL-60 human leukemia cells were treated with natural ceramide or N-oleoylethanolamide, a ceramidase inhibitor, as well as its inactive homologue, N-palmitoylethanolamide (40). Our current data, together with those gathered by Tserng and Griffin, therefore, indicate that this pattern of dihydroceramide and dihydrosphingosine accumulation is independent of the cell types and the reagents applied and therefore may represent a previously unrecognized type of cellular response to stress.
It is currently not clear which sphingolipid intermediate is responsible for T-induced cell death. Although we did not observe a significant increase of total ceramide until the late stage of apoptosis, it is possible that an increase of a specific ceramide, such as C16, preceded apoptosis (41-43). Further studies using HPLC and mass spectrometry are being undertaken to further elucidate the role of ceramide in T-mediated effects. It is known that C2-dihydroceramide does not directly cause cell death (37), but it is not clear whether long-chain dihydroceramide induces apoptosis. Our current observation that fumonisin, which attenuates dihydroceramide accumulation (data not shown), partially attenuated apoptosis suggests that dihydroceramide may partially contribute to T-caused biological effects. An increase in dihydrosphingosine could be another potential candidate, because this sphingolipid intermediate has been shown to induce apoptosis in certain types of cells (35).
The high level of dihydroceramide and dihydrosphingosine accumulation suggests that dihydroceramide desaturase is likely to be inhibited as a result of T treatment (Scheme 1). The potential interaction of this enzyme with vitamin E forms and possibly other apoptotic agents needs to be characterized. Little information is currently available regarding the role of this enzyme in cell survival. We suggest that dihydroceramide desaturase may play a role in the cellular response to certain chemical treatments, which warrants further investigation.
Although the nature of T-induced caspase-independent apoptosis is not clear, our data suggest that PARP can be cleaved by means of a caspase-independent mechanism (Fig. 6). The caspase-independent PARP cleavage has been reported previously in transforming growth factor 1-induced apoptosis in murine hepatocytes (44). In addition to apoptosis, the fact that T caused a small but significant increase in membrane impairment suggests that small portions of cells may undergo necrosis (Fig. 4B).
It is noteworthy that the tumor cell lines we have tested appear to be more sensitive to T-induced anti-proliferation or apoptosis compared with normal prostate epithelial cells. T and combinations of vitamin E forms are therefore potentially attractive candidates as anticancer agents. The observation that androgen-sensitive LNCaP cells, but not androgen-resistant PC-3 cells, are more susceptible to T-induced apoptosis indicates that these cells may have different mechanisms in coping with stresses, which has also been suggested by others (45). Future studies comparing the effect of vitamin E forms on sphingolipid metabolism in normal vs. cancer cells or apoptosis-sensitive (e.g., LNCaP) vs. -resistant (e.g., PC-3) cells may be useful to elucidate the regulatory role of different sphingolipids and related enzymes in cancer cell survival. These studies may also lead to the discovery of new therapeutic targets.
It is becoming clear that individual vitamin E forms possess different chemical and biological activities (6) and have distinct tissue distributions (46, 47). We therefore hypothesize that combinations of different forms of vitamin E may be superior to each alone. Consistently, combinations of T and T or T and TE showed additive or synergistic effects. Importantly, T did not interfere with the effect of T, although T is known to deplete T in vivo (48). Although high doses of T supplementation would be necessary to achieve relatively high concentrations of T, i.e., 50 µM, the combination effect indicates that a similar biological outcome may be achieved by a moderate supplementation with mixed vitamin E forms such as T and T or TE. The significance of this observation awaits further investigation.
In summary, this study demonstrates that T induces cell death in a prostate cancer cell line by interrupting de novo synthesis of sphingolipids. The combinations of vitamin E forms exhibit additive or synergistic effects. Our study, together with in vitro and epidemiological studies, strongly supports the notion that vitamin E forms may be useful as anticancer agents. Animal studies and clinical trials are necessary to further establish the role of various forms of vitamin E and their combinations in cancer therapy.
Acknowledgements |
---|
Footnotes |
---|
Freely available online through the PNAS open access option.
Abbreviations: AA, arachidonic acid; T, -tocopherol; T, -tocopherol; T, -tocopherol; TE, -tocotrienol; LA, linoleic acid; MTT, 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyl tetrazolium bromide; PARP, poly-ADP-ribose polymerase; Z-VAD-fmk, pancaspase inhibitor Z-Val-Ala-Asp(OMe)-CH2F.
Q.J. and B.N.A. hold a patent with Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute on the combinations of vitamin E forms.
To whom correspondence should be sent at the present address: Department of Foods and Nutrition, Purdue University, Stone Hall, 700 West State Street, West Lafayette, IN 47907. E-mail: qjiang@purdue.edu .
References |
---|
Top Abstract Materials and Methods Results Discussion References |
---|
Thanks
It has been shown to be harmful; hence I have ceased supplementing with "regular" E.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.