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Articles

Modulatory Effects of Curcumin and Tyrphostins (AG494 and AG1478) on Growth Regulation and Viability of LN229 Human Brain Cancer Cells

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Pages 1170-1182 | Received 16 Dec 2014, Accepted 14 Jul 2015, Published online: 12 Sep 2015
 

Abstract

In this study we employed curcumin as a potent adjuvant agent in the treatment of human brain cancer involving selective EGFR kinase inhibitors: tyrphostins AG494 and AG1478. Aim of this work was to evaluate the effect of tested compounds on autocrine growth, cell cycle, and viability of LN229 cells, as well as to assess their proapoptotic and genotoxic properties. Our results showed that all tested compounds significantly inhibited autocrine growth of the investigated cell line in a dose dependent manner. However they are characterized by different kinetics of cell growth inhibition. Suppression of growth by the tyrphostins was completely or partially reversible in contrast to curcumin. Curcumin increased the cytostatic and/or cytotoxic potential of AG494 and AG1478. Tyrphostins did not have genotoxic properties regardless of concentration used, whereas curcumin cytotoxic and genotoxic properties were directly proportional to the concentration. Curcumin significantly increased tyrphostins cytotoxicity. The most promising of the obtained results may be the use of curcumin and tyrphostin AG494 in the treatment of cancer cells. Anticancer effect of the mixture was confirmed by increase of cytotoxic effect, decrease of viability, stimulation of apoptotic procesess, irreversible DNA damage, and decrease of the ROS in the culture of glioblastoma cells.

FUNDING

This research was partly supported by the grant from National Science Centre no. 2011/03/B/NZl/00023.

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