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      Selected isothiocyanates rapidly induce growth inhibition of cancer cells.

      Molecular cancer therapeutics
      Apoptosis, Blotting, Western, Cell Cycle, Cell Differentiation, Cell Division, drug effects, Cell Line, Tumor, Chemokines, CC, biosynthesis, Drug Resistance, Neoplasm, HL-60 Cells, Humans, Inhibitory Concentration 50, Isothiocyanates, pharmacology, Membrane Potentials, Mitochondria, pathology, Models, Chemical, P-Glycoprotein, Time Factors

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          Abstract

          Many plant-derived isothiocyanates (ITCs), which occur in human diet, are potent cancer chemopreventive agents in animals. Among the anticarcinogenic mechanisms that have been revealed for ITCs is the inhibition of cell proliferation. We report that exposure of cancer cells to either allyl-ITC (AITC), benzyl-ITC (BITC), or phenethyl-ITC (PEITC) for only 3 h was long enough for the inhibition of cell growth, based on a comparison of IC50 values; regardless of the origin of cancer cells; and even in drug-resistant cells that overexpressed multidrug resistance associated protein-1 (MRP-1) or P-glycoprotein-1 (Pgp-1). In contrast, the inhibitory effect of another ITC, sulforaphane (SF), on these cells was highly time dependent. The finding that some ITCs could inhibit the proliferation of cancer cells in a largely time-independent manner is significant because ITCs that enter the human body are rapidly cleared through urinary excretion. Using human promyelocytic leukemia HL60/S as model cells, and focusing on AITC and BITC, we found that these ITCs modulated multiple cellular targets involved in proliferation, including the disruption of mitochondrial membrane potential, activation of multiple caspases, arrest of cell cycle progression, and induction of differentiation. Again, only a 3-h incubation of the cells with the ITCs was enough to exert their full effect on these targets. Taken together, our findings suggest that selected ITCs can rapidly initiate growth inhibition of cancer cells by simultaneously modulating multiple cellular targets, and their antiproliferative activity may be largely unaffected by their metabolism and disposition in vivo.

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