Abstract

Cancer stem-like cells represent a population of tumour-initiating cells that lead to the relapse and metastasis of cancer. Conventional anti-cancer therapeutic drugs are usually ineffective in eliminating the cancer stem-like cells. Therefore, new drugs or therapeutic methods effectively targeting cancer stem-like cells are in urgent need to successfully cure cancer. Gamboge is a natural anti-cancer medicine whose pharmacological effects are different from those of conventional chemotherapeutical drugs and they can kill some kinds of cancer cells selectively. In this study, we identified a new gamboge derivative, Compound 2 (C2), which presents eminent suppression effects on cancer cells. Interestingly, when compared with cisplatin (CDDP), C2 effectively suppresses the growth of both cancer stem-like cells and non-cancer stem-like cells derived from head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), inhibiting the formation of tumour spheres and colony in vitro, resulting in the loss of expression of multiple cancer stem cell (CSC)-related molecules in HNSCC. Treating with C2 effectively inhibited the growth of HNSCC in BALB/C nude mice. Further investigation found that C2 notably inhibits the activation of epithelial growth factor receptor and the phosphorylation of its downstream protein kinase homo sapiens v-akt murine thymoma viral oncogene homolog (AKT) in HNSCC, resulting in down-regulation of multiple CSC-related molecules in HNSCC. Our study has demonstrated that C2 effectively inhibits the stem-like property of cancer stem-like cells in HNSCC and may be a hopeful targeting drug in cancer therapy.

Highlights

  • Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma is the six most common cancer in the world [1], with ~600,000 patients newly diagnosed each year

  • The IC50 of Compound 2 (C2) on different cancer cells was from 0.144 lM (HN4) to 0.885 lM (HN13), with median value 0.59 lM, while the IC50 of CDDP was from 3.065 lM (Cal 27) to 4.881 lM (KB/VCR), with median value 3.839 lM (Table S1)

  • Some cancer cells showed less sensitive to C2, while others were more sensitive, indicating selective effects of C2 on different cells, while the IC50 of CDDP was more consistent across all cancer cell lines

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Summary

Introduction

Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma is the six most common cancer in the world [1], with ~600,000 patients newly diagnosed each year. Despite advances in the diagnosis and treatment of cancer, overall survival rates have not improved over the past few decades. Mortality in patients with HNSCC remains high because of regional and distant metastases and emergence of local and regional. Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd and Foundation for Cellular and Molecular Medicine.

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