Abstract

The management of castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) is challenging, attributable to a lack of efficacious therapies. Chemotherapy is one of the most important treatments for CRPC. Doxorubicin has been extensively used in many different tumors and is often combined with other drugs to enhance effects and reduce toxicity. Costunolide is a natural sesquiterpene lactone with anti-cancer properties. In this study, we first demonstrated that the combination of costunolide and doxorubicin induced apoptosis significantly more than either drug alone in prostate cancer cell lines. Costunolide combined with doxorubicin induced mitochondria-mediated apoptosis through a loss of mitochondrial membrane potential and modulation of Bcl-2 family proteins. We found that this drug combination significantly increased the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), as well as phosphorylation of c-jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinases, which play upstream roles in mitochondria-mediated apoptosis. Further studies showed that N-acetyl cysteine blocked JNK and p38 phosphorylation, suggesting that ROS were upstream activators of JNK and p38. However, a JNK inhibitor, but not a p38 inhibitor, blocked the increase in ROS observed in cells treated with a combination of costunolide and doxorubicin, suggesting that ROS and JNK could activate each other. In vivo, inhibition of tumor growth and induction of apoptosis were greater in mice treated with the costunolide and doxorubicin combination than in mice treated with either drug alone, without an increase in toxicity. Therefore, we suggested that costunolide in combination with doxorubicin was a new potential chemotherapeutic strategy for treating prostate cancer.

Highlights

  • Prostate cancer is commonly diagnosed in men living in western countries, and the incidence of prostate cancer in developing countries has been rapidly increasing in past decades [1, 2]

  • We found that this drug combination significantly increased the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), as well as phosphorylation of c-jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinases, which play upstream roles in mitochondria-mediated apoptosis

  • We investigated the effects of costunolide or Dox treatment on cell viability in the PC-3 and DU-145 prostate cancer cell lines

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Summary

Introduction

Prostate cancer is commonly diagnosed in men living in western countries, and the incidence of prostate cancer in developing countries has been rapidly increasing in past decades [1, 2]. Surgery and androgen ablation therapy are first-line treatments for prostate cancer, they often fail to be effective for advanced stage and castration-resistant prostate cancers (CRPCs) [3, 4]. Chemotherapy remains a very important option for advanced-stage prostate cancer patients. Drugs such as docetaxel have been first-line chemotherapeutics for CRPC [5]; prognoses remain very poor. It is necessary to develop effective chemotherapeutics that increase cancer cell death at lower doses and with fewer side effects

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