Abstract

The newly purified extracellular polysaccharides (exopolysaccharides) from Parachlorella kessleri (PCEPS) were evaluated on their antitumor and immunomodulatory effects in cell culture and mouse colon carcinoma peritoneal dissemination model. In two-dimensional cell culture, the PCEPS treatment inhibited cell growth of both murine and human colon carcinoma cells in a dose- and time-dependent manner. In contrast, the growth of mouse splenocytes (SPLs) and bone marrow cells (BMCs) were stimulated by the treatment with PCEPS. The treatment with PCEPS also increased specific subpopulations of the cells in BMCs: antigen presenting cells (CD19+ B cells, 33D1+ dendritic cells and CD68+ macrophage) and CD8+ cytotoxic T cells. In three-dimensional spheroid culture, spheroid growth of CT26 cells co-cultured with HL-60 human neutrophilic promyeloblasts and Jurkat cells (human lymphoblasts), but not THP-1 human monocyte/macrophage was significantly attenuated by PCEPS treatment. In a mouse CT26 colon carcinoma peritoneal dissemination model, intraperitoneal injection of PCEPS (10 mg/kg, twice per week) significantly attenuated the growth of CT26 colon carcinoma in syngeneic mice. The present study suggests that PCEPS inhibits colon carcinoma growth via direct cell growth inhibition and a stimulation of the host antitumor immune responses. Taken together, the current study suggests that exopolysaccharides derived from Parachlorella kessleri contain significant bioactive materials that inhibit colon carcinoma growth.

Highlights

  • polysaccharides (exopolysaccharides) from Parachlorella kessleri (PCEPS) treatment attenuated the growth of murine and human colon carcinoma cells, but stimulated human immune cells in 2D cell culture

  • CT26 murine colon carcinoma cells, SW620, HT29, COLO 205 and Caco-2 human colon carcinoma cells were treated with PCEPS (1–100 μg/ml) for 72 hrs in 2D cell culture

  • The time-dependent growth inhibition curves clearly indicated that CT26 cell growth was most sensitively inhibited by the PCEPS treatment (Fig 1C)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

In the United States, colon cancer is the second cause of cancer death and there is an estimated at 95,270 new cases and 49,190 deaths in 2016 [1]. In the early stage of colon cancer, cancer is removed by polypectomy or local excision and good prognosis is reserved for the patient whose 5-year survival rate is 90%. Survival rate declines to 70% and 13% for patients diagnosed with regional (lymph node) and distant (liver, lung and peritoneum) metastasis, respectively [2]. Incidence and mortality of colon cancer have declined for the past

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call