LDH-doped electrospun short fibers enable dual drug loading and multistage release for chemotherapy of drug-resistant cancer cells

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yupei Ma ◽  
Du Li ◽  
Yunchao Xiao ◽  
Zhijun OuYang ◽  
Mingwu Shen ◽  
...  

Conventional cancer chemotherapy is facing difficulties in improving the bioavailability, overcoming the severe adverse side effect of chemotherapeutics and reversing the multidrug resistance of cancer cells. To address these challenges,...

Author(s):  
Wipob Suttana ◽  
Chatubhong Singharachai ◽  
Rawiwan Charoensup ◽  
Narawadee Rujanapun ◽  
Chutima Suya

Chemotherapy can cause multidrug resistance in cancer cells and is cytotoxic to normal cells. Discovering natural bioactive compounds that are not cytotoxic to normal cells but inhibit proliferation and induce apoptosis in drug- sensitive and drug-resistant cancer cells could overcome these drawbacks of chemotherapy. This study investigated the antiproliferative effects of crude extracts of Benchalokawichian (BLW) remedy and its herbal components against drug-sensitive and drug-resistant cancer cells, cytotoxicity of the extracts toward normal cells, and their ability to induce apoptosis and cell cycle arrest in drug-sensitive and drug-resistant cancer cells. The extracts exhibited antiproliferative activity against doxorubicin-sensitive and doxorubicin-resistant erythromyelogenous leukemic cells (K562 and K562/adr). Tiliacora triandra root, BLW, and Harrisonia perforata root extracts displayed an IC50 of 77.00 ± 1.30, 79.33 ± 1.33, and 87.67 ± 0.67 µg/mL, respectively, against K562 cells. In contrast, Clerodendrum petasites, T. triandra, and H. perforata root extracts displayed the lowest IC50 against K562/adr cells (68.89 ± 0.75, 78.33 ± 0.69, and 86.78 ± 1.92 µg/mL, respectively). The resistance factor of the extracts was lower than that of doxorubicin, indicating that the extracts could overcome the multidrug resistance of cancer cells. Importantly, the extracts were negligibly cytotoxic to peripheral mononuclear cells, indicating minimal adverse effects in normal cells. In addition, these extracts induced apoptosis of K562 and K562/adr cells and caused cell cycle arrest at the G0/G1 phase in K562 cells. Keywords: Antiproliferative, Apoptosis, Benchalokawichian, Cell cycle, Multidrug resistance


2015 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 4698-4712 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheng Wang ◽  
Yun-Hao Pan ◽  
Ming Shan ◽  
Ming Xu ◽  
Jia-Lin Bao ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Jiaqi Xiao ◽  
Meixiang Gao ◽  
Qiang Diao ◽  
Feng Gao

: Drug resistance including multidrug resistance resulting from different defensive mechanisms in cancer cells is the leading cause of the failure about the cancer therapy, making it an urgent need to develop more effective anticancer agents. Chalcones, widely distributed in nature, could act on diverse enzymes and receptors in cancer cells. Accordingly, chalcone derivatives possess potential activity against various cancers including drug-resistant even multidrug-resistant cancer. This review outlines the recent development of chalcone derivatives with potential activity against drug-resistant cancers covering articles published between 2010 and 2020, so as to facilitate further rational design of more effective candidate.


1992 ◽  
Vol 70 (5) ◽  
pp. 365-375 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. C. Warrington

Human cancer chemotherapy is limited by two major problems: the failure of commonly used anticancer drugs to act against tumor cells in a specific manner and the ability of malignant cells to resist killing by antineoplastic agents. Experimentally, both of these problems can be solved by using L-histidinol in combination with conventional anticancer drugs. A structural analogue of the essential amino acid L-histidine and an inhibitor of protein biosynthesis. L-histidinol improves the selectivity and the efficacy of a variety of cancer drugs in several transplantable murine tumors. Furthermore, L-histidinol circumvents the drug-resistant traits of a variety of cancer cells, including those showing multidrug resistance. This review will summarize these properties of L-histidinol, present new evidence on its ability to increase the vulnerability of both drug-sensitive and drug-resistant human leukemia cells to various anticancer drugs, and show that, in addition to inhibiting protein synthesis, L-histidinol acts as an intracellular histamine antagonist. The establishment of a connection between the latter mechanism and the capacity to modulate anticancer drug action has resulted in a clinical trial in the treatment of human cancer.Key words: L-histidinol, antineoplastic agents, transplantable tumors, metastasis, multidrug resistance.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aastha Kapoor ◽  
Bhushan Thakur ◽  
Melissa Monteiro ◽  
Alakesh Das ◽  
Sejal Desai ◽  
...  

The failure of chemotherapeutic drugs in treatment of various cancers is attributed to the acquisition of drug resistance. However, the invasion mechanisms of drug-resistant cancer cells remains incompletely understood. Here we address this question from a biophysical perspective by mapping the phenotypic alterations in ovarian cancer cells (OCCs) resistant to cisplatin and paclitaxel. We show that cisplatin-resistant (CisR), paclitaxel-resistant (PacR) and dual drug-resistant (i.e., resistant to both drugs) OCCs are softer and more contractile than drug-sensitive cells. Protease inhibition suppresses invasion of CisR cells but not of PacR and dual cells, suggesting protease-dependent mode of invasion in CisR cells and protease-independent mode in PacR and dual cells. Despite these differences, actomyosin contractility, mediated by the RhoA-ROCK2-Myosin IIB signaling pathway regulates both modes of invasion. Myosin IIB modulates matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) secretion in CisR cells and nuclear squeezing in PacR and dual cells, thereby highlighting its importance as a potential therapeutic target for treatment of drug-resistant ovarian cancer cells.


Biomaterials ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 67 ◽  
pp. 169-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qing Shi ◽  
Lin Zhang ◽  
Mengyu Liu ◽  
Xuelin Zhang ◽  
Xiangjun Zhang ◽  
...  

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