[Cancer Research 60, 2800-2804, June 1, 2000]
© 2000 American Association
for Cancer Research
Aloe-emodin Is a New Type of Anticancer Agent with Selective Activity
against Neuroectodermal Tumors1
Teresa Pecere, M. Vittoria
Gazzola, Carla Mucignat, Cristina Parolin,
Francesca Dalla Vecchia, Andrea Cavaggioni,
Giuseppe Basso, Alberto Diaspro, Benedetto
Salvato, Modesto Carli and Giorgio Palù2
Department of Histology, Microbiology, and Medical
Biotechnologies, Medical School [T. P., C. P., G. P.], Division of Oncology and
Hematology, Department of Pediatrics, Medical School [M. V. G., G. B., M. C.],
Department of Human Anatomy and Physiology, Medical School [C. M., A. C.], and
Department of Biology [F. D. V., B. S.], University of Padova, 35100 Padova and
Istituto Nazionale Fisica della Materia and Department of Physics, University of
Genova, 16146 Genova [A. D.], Italy
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ABSTRACT |
Here we
report that aloe-emodin (AE), a hydroxyanthraquinone present in
Aloe vera leaves, has a specific in vitro and in
vivo antineuroectodermal tumor activity. The growth of human
neuroectodermal tumors is inhibited in mice with severe combined
immunodeficiency without any appreciable toxic effects on the
animals. The compound does not inhibit the proliferation of normal
fibroblasts nor that of hemopoietic progenitor cells. The
cytotoxicity mechanism consists of the induction of apoptosis,
whereas the selectivity against neuroectodermal tumor cells is
founded on a specific energy-dependent pathway of drug incorporation.
Taking into account its unique cytotoxicity profile and mode of
action, AE might represent a conceptually new lead antitumor
drug.
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Introduction |
With the
aim of developing novel anticancer drugs characterized by selective
targeting and low toxicity for dividing normal host tissues, we
devoted our attention to a number of natural compounds that have
traditionally been used to treat a variety of diseases for hundreds
of years (1,
2,
3) .
We assayed only those natural compounds that have already been proven
to be nontoxic, and we evaluated their efficacy against highly
malignant tumors that are not normally included in the classical
screening assays, i.e., pPNET,3
Ewing’s sarcoma, and neuroblastoma. The last of these is the most
common solid extracranial tumor in infants, accounting for 10% of all
childhood cancers. At the time of diagnosis,
50% of affected children have disseminated neuroblastoma
disease with a very poor prognosis that has remained unchanged in the
last 3 decades (4
,
5) . Our study analyzed the cytotoxic potential of AE, a
hydroxyanthraquinone (Fig. 1
A) naturally present in the leaves of Aloe vera (6
,
7) . This report describes the selective in vitro and
in vivo killing of neuroectodermal tumor cells by AE, the
anticancer activity of which is based on apoptotic cell death,
promoted by a tumor cell-specific drug uptake process that may offer
opportunities for novel anticancer agents.
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Fig. 1. Chemical structure of AE
(1,8-dihydroxy-3-hydroxymethyl-9,10-anthracenedione; A) and
aloin (10–1',5'-anhydroglucosyl-aloe-emodin-9-anthrone; B).
| |
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Materials and Methods |
Drugs.
AE
was purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (Milan, Italy); it was dissolved in
DMSO to reach a concentration of 200 mM and stored at
-20°C. The compound was diluted in the appropriate medium
immediately before use. AE is a fluorescent compound with a maximum
excitation wavelength at 410 nm and a maximum emission wavelength at
510 nm. Aloin was a generous gift of MacFarlan Smith Ltd. (Edinburgh,
Scotland). It was dissolved by slight warming in saline solution at
the working concentration.
Mice.
Female SCID mice were purchased from Charles River
Italia (Calco, Italy). The animals were kept in a pathogen-free
colony, in microisolators, and were fed sterile pellets and sterile
water ad libitum. During the experiments, mice were tested for
the presence of gross sensory or motor neurological disturbances: the
geotaxic response and righting reflexes, forelimb placement reflex,
and climbing responses (8)
. Hematological assessment was performed by Coulter MAXM. The animals
were scored twice a week for body weight and daily for fecal
emission. The mice were age matched (6–8 weeks of age) at the
beginning of each experiment.
Cell Culture.
Neuroblastoma cells (IMR-32, IMR-5, AF8,
and SJ-N-KP), pPNET cells (TC32), Ewing’s sarcoma cells (TC106),
T-cell leukemia cells (CEM), and vinblastine-resistant cells (CEM
VBL), colon adenocarcinoma cells (LoVo 109), and
doxorubicin-resistant cells (LoVo DX) were cultured in RPMI 1640
supplemented with 25 mM HEPES buffer and with 2
mM L-glutamine (all from Life
Technologies, Ltd., Paisley, Scotland). The culture of CEM VBL cells
was supplemented with 10 µg/ml vinblastine (Lilly France,
Saint-Cloud, Paris, France), and the culture of LoVo DX cells was
supplemented with 0.1 µg/ml doxorubicin (Pharmacia, Milan, Italy).
Cervix epithelioid carcinoma (HeLa) and human lung fibroblast
(MRC5) cells were cultured in DMEM supplemented with 25 mM HEPES buffer and with 2 mM
L-glutamine (all from Life Technologies, Ltd.).
All culture medium was supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated fetal
bovine serum (Sigma-Aldrich, Milan. Italy), 100 units/ml penicillin,
and 100 µg/ml streptomycin (Sigma-Aldrich, Irvine, United Kingdom).
All cell lines were grown at 37°C with 5% CO2 humidified
atmosphere.
In Vitro Cytotoxicity.
The cytotoxic activity of
AE was determined in exponentially growing cells in complete medium
over 72 h. The cells were seeded in 12 wells/plate 24 h before the
treatment; monolayer cells were plated at a density of 5–7 x 104 cells/well, and
suspension cells were plated at 40 x
104 cells/well. AE was added to the experimental final
concentration, and cells were counted 72 h later using the trypan
blue exclusion assay. All of the experiments were conducted at least
in triplicate.
Hemopoietic Progenitors and Neuroblastoma Colony
Assay.
MNCs from BM aspirates and CB samples and from
neuroblastoma cell lines (SJ-N-KP and AF8) were cultured in
methylcellulose medium supplemented with a combination of recombinant
colony-stimulating factors (Stem Cell Technologies, Vancouver,
British Columbia, Canada). Cells were plated in triplicate at the
concentration of 5 x
104/ml for BM- and CB-MNC, and 1 x
103
for NB cells, in 35-mm-diameter dishes (Becton Dickinson, Franklin
Lakes, NJ) and incubated at 37°C in a 5% CO2 humidified
atmosphere. MNC and NB cell lines were cultured in the absence or in
the presence of different concentrations of AE. On day 14 of
culture, the number of CFU-GM and neuroblastoma colonies was
counted with an inverted microscope (Leitz-Diavert). All of the
experiments were conducted at least three times.
Fluorescence-activated Cell Sorting
Analysis.
Neuroblastoma (SJ-N-KP), colon adenocarcinoma (LoVo 109),
and cervix epithelioid carcinoma (HeLa) cell lines (1 x 106) were cultured for
different time periods in the presence of AE or drug-free medium.
Cells were harvested, washed twice with PBS, and fixed with cold 70%
ethanol at 4°C. After centrifugation of the samples, propidium iodide
(50 µg/ml in PBS) and RNase were added to the pellet for 20 min at
37°C to determinate the effect of AE on the cell cycle dynamics. DNA
fluorescence was measured by flow cytometry (EPICS XL; Coulter,
Miami, FL) analysis according to a published method (9)
. To determinate drug uptake, SJ-N-KP, LoVo 109, and HeLa cells were
cultured in the presence of 25 µM of AE or in
drug-free medium at 37°C or at 4°C or in presence of NaN3,
for 24 h and then analyzed by flow cytometry (10)
.
Two-Photon Excitation Microscopy.
Neuroblastoma (IMR5),
colon adenocarcinoma (LoVo 109), and cervix epithelioid carcinoma
(HeLa) cell lines were seeded on microscope coverslips in 12-well
plates and cultured with drug-free medium 24 h before treatment. Then
AE was added at different concentrations. At different time points,
cells were washed twice with PBS and examined by means of
"fluorescence two-photon confocal microscopy." Optical sections were
acquired with a TPE architecture described in detail elsewhere (11)
.
Transmission Electron Microscopy Analysis.
Cells were
cultured with different concentrations of AE or with drug-free
medium. At 24 and 48 h cells were scraped, washed twice in PBS,
and fixed overnight at 4°C in 3% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M sodium cacodylate buffer (pH 6.9) and then processed
according to Ciman et al. (12)
. Ultrathin sections, cut with an ultramicrotome (Ultracut;
Reichert-jung), were observed with the transmission electron
microscope (TEM 300; Hitachi) operating at 75 kV.
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Results |
Cytotoxic
Activity of AE in Cell Culture.
The cytotoxic potential of AE was
evaluated on exponentially growing cells over a period of 72 h. As
shown in Fig. 2
A, AE displayed a specific
dose-dependent cytotoxic effect on neuroblastoma, pPNET, and Ewing’s
sarcoma cells. Indeed, the growth of the neuroectodermal tumor cell
lines was specifically inhibited, and ED50s (half-maximal
effective doses) ranged between 1 and 13 µM
(neuroblastoma and Ewing’s sarcoma, respectively). Conversely,
epithelial tumors, such as cervix carcinoma and colon carcinoma
cells, and also T-cell leukemia cells and normal fibroblasts, were
almost refractory to the treatment with AE (Fig. 2B
). ED50s for these cell lines ranged from 40
µM for cervix carcinoma cells (HeLa) to 100
µM for T-cell leukemia cells (CEM).
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Fig. 2. AE cytotoxicity. The cells were
incubated with different concentrations of AE for a period of 72 h.
A, toxicity dose-response curves of neuroectodermal tumor
cell lines: neuroblastoma cells, IMR5 ( ), IMR32 ( ), AF8 ( ), SJNKP ( ); pPNET cells, TC32 (x),
Ewing’s sarcoma cells TC106 ( ). B, cytotoxicity of AE in different tumor cell
lines and normal fibroblasts: colon adenocarcinoma cells, LoVo 109
( ) and MDR cells LoVo DX ( ); T-cell leukemia cells, CEM ( ) and MDR cells CEM VBL (x); cervix epithelioid carcinoma cells
HeLa ( ) and human lung fibroblast cells MRC5 (•). The fraction of
viable cells was calculated by defining the viability of cells
without AE treatment as 100%. C, percentage of colony growth
of neuroblastoma cells (SJ-N-KP) and of CFU-GM obtained from BM and
CB samples incubated with different concentrations of AE after 14
days. The amount of colony growth was calculated by defining the
colony-forming activity of samples without AE treatment as 100%. All
determinations were repeated three times. A statistically
significant difference was observed (P < 0.05).
| |
To
determine whether AE might have inhibited the clonogenic activity of
the hemopoietic progenitors and neuroectodermal tumor cell lines,
cells were seeded into methylcellulose medium and monitored for
colony formation. As shown in Fig. 2
C, AE had no significant inhibitory
activity on the growth of CFU-GM after 14 days of treatment. The
colony growth was only partially reduced at high concentrations of
AE, with ED50s of 80 and 120 µM,
respectively, for BM- and CB-derived CFU-GMs. In contrast, the
colony-forming activity of neuroblastoma cells (SJ-N-KP) was
inhibited at a much lower concentration of AE (ED50 of 7 µM).
Specific Uptake of AE by Neuroectodermal Tumor Cell Lines and
Intracellular Localization.
To explain the specific cytotoxic
activity of AE against neuroectodermal tumor cell lines, we evaluated
the cellular uptake of this compound by different cell lines,
exploiting the drug’s relatively intense green fluorescence (see
"Materials and Methods"). As shown in Fig. 3, A and B
and B, AE treatment of SJ-N-KP and HeLa
cells at 37°C gave rise to an intense fluorescence emission only from
the former, a result suggestive of AE selective cellular uptake.
Conversely, when SJ-N-KP cells were exposed to AE at 4°C, no
fluorescence emission was detected (Fig. 3C
). With colorectal carcinoma (LoVo 109) and T-cell
leukemia (CEM) cell lines, lack of drug uptake was also observed at
37°C (data not shown).
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Fig. 3. Flow cytometry analysis of AE
cellular uptake. All cell cultures were incubated with 25 µM of AE for 24 h. Neuroblastoma (SJ-N-KP; A)
and cervix carcinoma (HeLa; B) cells were incubated at 37°C.
C, SJ-N-KP cells were incubated at 4°C. D, SJ-N-KP
cells with depleted ATP pools were treated for 24 h at 37°C. The
cellular uptake of AE was measured by flow cytometry analysis using
AE green fluorescence (right line). Untreated cells were used
for control purpose (left line). Intracellular drug
distribution analysis by TPE microscopy in neuroblastoma cells
(E) and in cervix carcinoma cells (F) treated for 24 h
with 25 µM of AE.
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To
determine whether drug accumulation depended on the energized status
of the cells, ATP pools were depleted by a 2-h preincubation with 1
mM NaN3 in glucose-free medium (13)
. Fig. 3D
shows that this led to a significant decrease
in intracellular fluorescence emission by SJ-N-KP cells.
Microscopic observation with TPE modality showed the relative
amount of AE uptake and provided three-dimensional information
on the drug’s intracellular fate in sensitive cells. After 24 h
of incubation, AE was present in the cytoplasm of neuroblastoma cell
lines in a spotty fashion inside endosomes (Fig. 3E
), with an intensity of fluorescence of 8.8
arbitrary units. A barely detectable fluorescence emission (1.9
arbitrary units) was recovered from HeLa (Fig. 3F
), LoVo 109, and MRC5 cells maintained under
the same experimental conditions.
Nuclear localization of AE was readily appreciable in the sensitive
cells as early as 1 h after treatment. In this case, because of
the intrinsic fluorescence quenching of the anthraquinone on
interaction with DNA (14)
, drug detection was achieved by counterstaining nuclei with
propidium iodide (data not shown).
Effects of AE on Cell Cycle and Apoptosis.
On the basis
of its chemosensitivity profile, neuroblastoma was selected as a
prototype chemosensitive tumor for exploring the molecular
requirements for AE-triggered cell death. Changes in SJ-N-KP cellular
proliferation (DNA content and distribution) during treatment with AE
were monitored by flow cytometry over a period of 48 h, an interval
sufficient for SJ-N-KP cells to complete a cell cycle. As shown in
Fig. 4, A and B,
after 24 h of treatment a relevant proportion
of the cells remained in the G2-M phase of the cycle
(20%). After 48 h, a sub-G0 peak (60%) was observed,
suggestive of the presence of apoptotic cells with fragmented DNA
(Fig. 4C
). Typical morphological features of apoptotic
cell death, with cell shrinkage, membrane blebbing, and nuclear
fragmentation, were also exhibited by most AE-treated cells at TEM
analysis. A representative picture of this phenomenon is shown in
Fig. 4, D and E
.
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Fig. 4. Effect of AE on cell cycle
dynamics determined by flow cytometry. A, DNA fluorescence
flow cytometric profiles of propidium iodide-stained neuroblastoma
cells before AE treatment; DNA fluorescence flow cytometric profiles
of propidium iodide-stained neuroblastoma cells after 24 (B)
and 48 (C) h of incubation with AE. TEM analysis: D,
neuroblastoma cell line in standard culture; E, neuroblastoma
cells treated with AE for 48 h. Note the capping of chromatin
(single-head arrows) and the loss of cell surface membrane
protrusions (double-head arrows). Bars, 1 µm.
| |
In
Vivo Inhibition of Neuroblastoma Growth by AE.
The potential of
AE as an antineoplastic agent in vivo was assessed in a murine
model system. Mice with SCID were injected s.c. with human
neuroblastoma cells (IMR5) and immediately treated with AE at a dose
of 50 mg/Kg/day (the highest concentration compatible with an aqueous
solution of the drug). The tumor was sensitive to the drug, as shown
by a significant reduction (P < 0.05) of its growth in the
animal hosts (Fig. 5A
). Furthermore, when AE treatment was delayed
until a palpable tumor mass had developed (day 15), tumor growth was
halted (Fig. 5B
) throughout the period of drug administration
(P < 0.05). As seen in vitro (Fig. 2B
), the human colon carcinoma cell line (LoVo 109)
injected s.c. into SCID mice was refractory to the treatment (Fig.
5C
). No appreciable signs of acute or chronic
toxicity were observed in any of the treated animals; weight,
neurological and intestinal functions, and hematological parameters
were normal, and no other manifestation of acute toxicity was
evident. No structural abnormalities were observed on macroscopic
examination in either the AE-treated or control group.
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Discussion |
Here we
show that AE, a hydroxyanthraquinone present in Aloe vera
leaves, selectively inhibits human neuroectodermal tumor cell growth
in tissue cultures and in animal models. Neuroblastoma, pPNET, and
Ewing’s sarcoma cells were found highly susceptible to AE,
whereas human malignant cells from epithelial and blood-derived
tumors, as well as human hemopoietic progenitors and normal
fibroblasts, were not sensitive to this compound. This is the
first report that describes the potential antitumor activity of
AE. Other groups had already investigated AE as a cytotoxic agent on
several tumor cell lines, but no significant activity was found. In
this regard, Driscoll et al. (15)
assayed 379 anthraquinone derivatives against L-1210 leukemia in mice
and included AE among the inactive compounds. Grimaudo et al.
(16)
reported that AE was endowed with some degree of cytotoxicity
for erythroleukemia cell lines but only at high concentrations.
On the other hand, Schörkhuber et al. (17)
demonstrated a stimulatory effect of AE on urokinase secretion and
colorectal carcinoma cell growth. Here we show that AE is selectively
toxic against neuroectodermal tumors and inhibits human
neuroectodermal tumor growth in an animal model with no evidence of
acute or chronic toxicity. Lack of toxicity in combination with
significant antitumor activity results in a favorable therapeutic
index. Our study describes the discovery of AE as a new type of
anticancer agent possessing an unprecedented cytotoxic mechanism. A
specific intracellular uptake was responsible for the selective
toxicity of AE against human neuroectodermal tumor cells.
Measurements performed at 37°C showed a high level of incorporation
of the compound into the tumor cells of neuroectodermal origin but
not into other tumor cells. When neuroblastoma cells were exposed
to the drug at 4°C, however, AE uptake was completely abolished.
A similar result was obtained when the cells were ATP depleted,
indicating that drug influx was an energy-dependent process.
The nature of this process, apparently unique to neuroectodermal
tumor cells, is not related to passive diffusion, nor is it
likely to depend on membrane partition phenomena, which occur only
at 37°C and in fully energized cells. On the other hand, when
the chromophore structure of AE was modified by the presence of a
hydrophilic glycosidic residue, as in aloin, a natural glucoside
whose AE is the aglycone (Fig. 1B
), no incorporation occurred and no
cytotoxicity was exhibited in susceptible cells (data not shown). Our
data would thus point to a receptor-mediated recognition process
behind selective AE uptake.
Morphological observations of AE-treated neuroectodermal tumor
cells revealed the typical features of apoptosis, an effect
produced by many anticancer drugs (18
,
19) . The apoptotic phenomenon was further confirmed by the
detection of a sub-G0 peak, at flow cytometry, after 48 h
of treatment. The induction of programmed cell death might be related
to induction of DNA damage, as suggested by cytosolic and nuclear
localization time courses.
Because of the nonselective mechanisms of action of common anticancer
drugs, a high incidence of potentially severe toxicity must be
tolerated for effective doses to be administered (20)
. In this regard, it is noteworthy that AE does not inhibit the
proliferation of hematopoietic progenitors. In fact, the
colony-forming activity of CFU-GM from BM and CB is not suppressed at
concentrations even a hundred times higher than those inhibiting
neuroectodermal tumor cell growth and clonogenic activity. This
finding is at variance with the behavior of all anticancer agents in
use to date and points to a novel selective mechanism residing in
specific tumor targeting by a naturally available compound.
Taking into account its unique in vitro and in vivo
antitumor activity, selective toxicity, and cellular
pharmacokinetics, AE can be viewed as a conceptually new lead
anticancer agent that might contribute to the development of targeted
nontoxic drugs. Preclinical development is clearly warranted and is
currently under way to explore the potential use of AE for the
primary or adjuvant treatment of human neuroblastoma.
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Acknowledgments |
We are grateful to
Paolina Mariani for support, to Arianna Calistri, Francesca Gennari,
and Rossella Marcucci for helpful comments and suggestions, to Elisa
Franchin, Federico Dal Bello, and Monica Spinelli for technical
support; and to Francesco Bracco and Lucia Masiero for assistance in
the statistical analysis.
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FOOTNOTES |
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed
in part by the payment of page charges. This article must
therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18
U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
1 This work was supported by a grant
from Associazione Italiana lotta alla Leucemia (Sezione di Padova; to
T. P.), by grants from Regione Veneto, Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio
di Padova e Rovigo, ISS-AIDS, CNR-Biotechnology (to G. P.) and
financial support from Ministero dell’Università e della
Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica (MURST).
2 To whom requests for reprints
should be addressed, at Department of Histology, Microbiology, and
Medical Biotechnologies, Medical School, University of Padova, via
Gabelli 63, 35121 Padova, Italy.
3 The abbreviations used are: pPNET,
primitive peripheral neuroectodermal tumor; AE, aloe-emodin; SCID,
severe combined immunodeficiency; MNC, mononuclear cell; BM, bone
marrow; CB, cord blood; CFU-GM, colony forming
unit-granulocyte/macrophage; TPE, two-photon excitation; TEM,
transmission electron microscopy.
Received 3/16/00; accepted 4/19/00.
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