Thymoquinone from Nigella Sativa Seeds Promotes the Antitumor Activity of Nontoxic Doses of Topotecan in Human Colorectal Cancer Cells in Vitro
Abstract
Topotecan, a topoisomerase I inhibitor, is an anticancer drug widely used in the therapy
of lung, ovarian, colorectal, and breast adenocarcinoma. Due to the primary doselimiting
toxicity of topotecan, which is myelosuppressive, it is necessary to identify other
chemotherapeutic agents that can work synergistically with topotecan to increase its
efficacy and limit its toxicity. Many studies have shown synergism upon the combination
of topotecan with other chemotherapeutic agents such as gemcitabine. Other studies
have demonstrated that pre-exposing cells to naturally occurring compounds such
as thymoquinone, followed by gemcitabine or oxaliplatin, resulted in higher growth
inhibition compared to treatment with gemcitabine or oxaliplatin alone. Our aim was to
elucidate the underlying mechanism of action of topotecan in the survival and apoptotic
pathways in human colon cancer cell lines in comparison to thymoquinone, to study the
proapoptotic and antiproliferative effects of thymoquinone on the effectiveness of the
chemotherapeutic agent topotecan, and to investigate the potential synergistic effect
of thymoquinone with topotecan. Cells were incubated with different topotecan and
thymoquinone concentrations for 24 and 48 hours in order to determine the IC50 for each
drug. Combined therapy was then tested with ± 2 values for the IC50 of each drug. The
reduction in proliferation was significantly dose- and time-dependent. After determining
the best combination (40 µM thymoquinone and 0.6 µM topotecan), cell proteins were
extracted after treatment, and the expression levels of B-cell lymphoma 2 and of its
associated X protein, proteins p53 and p21, and caspase-9, caspase-3, and caspase-8
were studied by Western blot. In addition, cell cycle analysis and annexin/propidium iodide
staining were performed. Both drugs induced apoptosis through a p53-independent
mechanism, whereas the expression of p21 was only seen in thymoquinone treatment.
Cell cycle arrest in the S phase was detected with each compound separately, while
combined treatment only increased the production of fragmented DNA. Both compounds
induced apoptosis through the extrinsic pathway after 24 hours; however, after 48
hours, the intrinsic pathway was activated by topotecan treatment only. In conclusion,
thymoquinone increased the effectiveness of the chemotherapeutic reagent topotecan
by inhibiting proliferation and lowering toxicity through p53- and Bax/Bcl2-independent
mechanisms.
Author(s)
Rizk S., Khalifeh R., Hodroj M., Fakhoury R.
Journal/Conference Information
The FASEB Journal ,82(4): 312-321