Abstract

BackgroundThe study was designed to develop a platform to verify whether the extract of herbs combined with chemotherapy drugs play a synergistic role in anti-tumor effects, and to provide experimental evidence and theoretical reference for finding new effective sensitizers.MethodsInhibition of tanshinone IIA and adriamycin on the proliferation of A549, PC9 and HLF cells were assessed by CCK8 assays. The combination index (CI) was calculated with the Chou-Talalay method, based on the median-effect principle. Migration and invasion ability of A549 cells were determined by wound healing assay and transwell assay. Flow cytometry was used to detect the cell apoptosis and the distribution of cell cycles. TUNEL staining was used to detect the apoptotic cells. Immunofluorescence staining was used to detect the expression of Cleaved Caspase-3. Western blotting was used to detect the proteins expression of relative apoptotic signal pathways. CDOCKER module in DS 2.5 was used to detect the binding modes of the drugs and the proteins.ResultsBoth tanshinone IIA and adriamycin could inhibit the growth of A549, PC9, and HLF cells in a dose- and time-dependent manner, while the proliferative inhibition effect of tanshinone IIA on cells was much weaker than that of adriamycin. Different from the cancer cells, HLF cells displayed a stronger sensitivity to adriamycin, and a weaker sensitivity to tanshinone IIA. When tanshinone IIA combined with adriamycin at a ratio of 20:1, they exhibited a synergistic anti-proliferation effect on A549 and PC9 cells, but not in HLF cells. Tanshinone IIA combined with adriamycin could synergistically inhibit migration, induce apoptosis and arrest cell cycle at the S and G2 phases in A549 cells. Both groups of the single drug treatment and the drug combination up-regulated the expressions of Cleaved Caspase-3 and Bax, but down-regulated the expressions of VEGF, VEGFR2, p-PI3K, p-Akt, Bcl-2, and Caspase-3 protein. Compared with the single drug treatment groups, the drug combination groups were more statistically significant. The molecular docking algorithms indicated that tanshinone IIA could be docked into the active sites of all the tested proteins with H-bond and aromatic interactions, compared with that of adriamycin.ConclusionsTanshinone IIA can be developed as a novel agent in the postoperative adjuvant therapy combined with other anti-tumor agents, and improve the sensibility of chemotherapeutics for non-small cell lung cancer with fewer side effects. In addition, this experiment can not only provide a reference for the development of more effective anti-tumor medicine ingredients, but also build a platform for evaluating the anti-tumor effects of Chinese herbal medicines in combination with chemotherapy drugs.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12885-016-2921-x) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The study was designed to develop a platform to verify whether the extract of herbs combined with chemotherapy drugs play a synergistic role in anti-tumor effects, and to provide experimental evidence and theoretical reference for finding new effective sensitizers

  • These data hinted that Human Lung Fibroblast (HLF) cells displayed a stronger sensitivity to ADM, and a weaker sensitivity to tanshinone Tanshinone IIA (IIA), compared with the Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) A549 cell line and the NSCLC PC9 cell line

  • Different from the two NSCLC cell lines, HLF cells displayed a stronger sensitivity to ADM, while a much weaker sensitivity to tanshinone IIA, which indicated that tanshinone IIA might have little toxicity to human normal cells, with ADM showing the opposite effect

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Summary

Introduction

The study was designed to develop a platform to verify whether the extract of herbs combined with chemotherapy drugs play a synergistic role in anti-tumor effects, and to provide experimental evidence and theoretical reference for finding new effective sensitizers. The tremendous side effects caused by chemotherapy severely impact the efficacy of treatments as well as the quality of life [2], indicating there is room for improvement in treatment methods [3, 4]. As other single agent treatment, it can cause bone marrow suppression, alopecia, nausea, and other adverse reactions. Long-term use of single agent may result in dose-dependent irreversible cardiomyopathy, causing severe cardiac toxicity and liver damage. The emergence of drug resistance and potential side effects highlight the major limitations for the single agent treatment in the clinical application [5]. In order to improve the antitumor effects and reduce the adverse reactions of chemotherapeutics, drug combination treatment is one of the solutions. A search for novel strategies of combinational usage of agents to increase chemotherapeutic efficacy, and minimize associated toxicities to noncancerous tissues, should be at the forefront of oncology research [6]

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