Caffeic Acid Phenethyl Ester, a natural radiosensitizer for lung adenocarcinomas
Elia Prades-Sagarra,
The Netherlands
PD-0488
Abstract
Caffeic Acid Phenethyl Ester, a natural radiosensitizer for lung adenocarcinomas
Authors: Èlia Prades-Sagarra1, Rianne Biemans1, Natasja G. Lieuwes1, Philippe Lambin1, Ala Yaromina1, Ludwig J. Dubois1
1Maastricht University, Precision Medicine - The M lab, Maastricht, The Netherlands
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Purpose or Objective
Radiotherapy-induced
adverse effects are dose limiting factors and therefore narrow the therapeutic
window. A novel potential radioprotector, Caffeic Acid Phenethyl Ester (CAPE),
has been suggested to widen the therapeutic window by having cytotoxic effects
in tumor cells but protecting the normal tissue against radiation. CAPE has
been shown to have anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidant effects in normal tissue,
while anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic effects in tumor cells. The aim of
this study is therefore to investigate the radiosensitizing effect of CAPE in a
panel of lung cancer cell lines in vitro.
Material and Methods
Human
adenocarcinoma (H1299, H1975, H522, HCC827) and non-adenocarcinoma (H520, H292)
NSCLC lines were incubated for 24 hours with increasing doses of CAPE. Viability
was assessed using multi-well plate alamarBlue-based viability assays. Clonogenic
survival assays were used to assess the radiosensitizing properties of CAPE. Cells
were incubated with CAPE (IC25 and IC50) for 24 hours
followed by irradiation with doses up to 6 Gy, and seeded to allow colony
formation. Colonies were stained and counted (>50 cells) after 11 to 15
days.
Results
Treatment
with CAPE decreased cell viability in lung cancer cells in a dose-dependent
manner. IC50 values varied between 32 and 88 μM. Clonogenic survival assays showed significant
radiosensitization by CAPE in human lung adenocarcinoma cell lines (H1299 p<0.001,
H1975 p<0.0001, H522 p<0.0001 for both CAPE concentrations IC25 and
IC50; HCC827 p<0.0001 for CAPE IC25, p<0.01 for CAPE IC50).
Conversely, no significant differences were found in human lung
non-adenocarcinoma lines (H520 p=0.1323, H292 p=0.6456 for CAPE IC50)
comparing CAPE treatment combined with radiation and radiation alone.
Conclusion
CAPE
has cytotoxic effects in human lung cancer lines, but sensitizes only human
lung adenocarcinoma lines to radiation. No radiosensitizing effect was observed
in human non-adenocarcinoma lines. In attempt to explain the differences
between adenocarcinoma and non-adenocarcinoma lung cancer cell lines, the study
of the molecular mechanisms of CAPE-mediated radiosensitization in tumor cells,
such as NF-κB
pathway blockage and metabolic changes, is ongoing. Furthermore, the
radioprotective effects of CAPE in normal tissue are currently being
investigated.