A number of previous studies investigated the in vitro effects of resveratrol on malignant human breast epithelial cell replication. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the activity of resveratrol on human metastatic breast cancer cells. The study was performed on the MCF-7 tumor cell line. Cell growth, cell cycle perturbation and apoptosis were evaluated by trypan blue dye exclusion assay, flow cytometric analysis and confocal fluorescence microscopy. TRAP assay and Western blot analysis respectively detected levels of telomerase activity and levels of hTERT in intracellular compartments of MCF-7 cells treated with resveratrol. Resveratrol has a direct inhibitory effect on cell proliferation. The results demonstrate that the drug induces apoptosis in MCF-7 cells, in a time-and concentrationrelated manner. Our results also show that the growth-inhibitory effect of resveratrol on malignant cells is mainly due to its ability to induce S-phase arrest and apoptosis in association with reduced levels of telomerase activity. In particular, TRAP assay and Western blot analysis respectively showed that resveratrol treatment down-regulates the telomerase activity of target cells and the nuclear levels of hTERT, the reverse transcriptase subunit of the telomerase complex. In our experimental model of breast cancer, resveratrol shows direct antiproliferative and pro-apoptotic effects. Studies on telomerase function and intracellular hTERT distribution point out that this agent is endowed with additional suppressive functions on critical tumor biological properties. These results speak in favor of a potential role of resveratrol in chemoprevention/chemotherapy of breast cancer.
MLBL is an oral immunostimulating vaccine consisting of bacterial standardized lysates obtained by mechanical lysis of different strains of Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria that can cause acute and chronic infections of the respiratory tract. Previous studies suggested a stimulating effect of MLBL both on humoral and cellular immune responses. In the present study, the in vitro effects of MLBL on human lymphocyte effector functions and its mechanisms of action were evaluated. The results show that the most remarkable effects of MLBL on the immune system are: i) activation of the IL-2 receptor (IL-2Ra) on different lymphocyte subsets (B, CD4+ T and CD8+ T cells) involved both in humoral and cellular immune responses; ii) induction of cytokine synthesis (IL-2, IL-IO, IL-12, IFNy) in the immune competent cells that induce and regulate immune responses; iii) generation of CD4+ and CD8+ effector T cells. Overall, these results suggest that the therapeutic effect of MLBL on acute and recurrent infections of the respiratory tract is related to its ability to activate the responses of different subsets of immune competent cells both for humoral and cellular immunity. Moreover, these effects can be induced either by direct immune cell activation or through the generation and activation of immune effector cells.
Resveratrol, a polyphenol present in many plant species, exhibits a wide range of biological and pharmacological activities both in vitro and in vivo. It has been shown to exert a potent chemopreventive effect in carcinogenesis models and to induce cell growth inhibition and apoptosis in human tumour cells, including melanoma cells. Malignant melanoma is considered to be a chemotherapy-refractory tumour, and the commonly used anticancer drugs do not seem to modify the prognosis of metastatic disease. To further evaluate the therapeutic potential of resveratrol in the treatment of melanoma, we selected three human melanoma cell lines with different levels of resistance to temozolomide (TMZ), an antitumour triazene compound. The cell lines were subjected to resveratrol treatment and analysed for cell growth inhibition, cell cycle perturbation and apoptosis induction. We found that resveratrol markedly impaired proliferation of both the TMZ-sensitive M14 and the TMZ-resistant SK-Mel-28 and PR-Mel cell lines. The latter cell line was two-fold more resistant to the drug than M14 and SK-Mel-28 cells. The sensitivity of normal human keratinocytes to resveratrol was found to be significantly higher than that of M14 and SK-Mel-28 cells and similar to that of the PR-Mel cell line. This suggests a possible good in vivo therapeutic index for resveratrol. Our results also show that the growth-inhibitory effect of resveratrol on melanoma cells is mainly due to its ability to induce S-phase arrest and apoptosis. Taken together, our data indicate that resveratrol is an interesting candidate for the treatment of advanced melanoma.
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