Abstract Title:

Curcumin Reactivates Silenced Tumor Suppressor Gene RARβ by Reducing DNA Methylation.

Abstract Source:

Phytother Res. 2015 May 15. Epub 2015 May 15. PMID: 25981383

Abstract Author(s):

Apei Jiang, Xuemin Wang, Xiaoyun Shan, Yuan Li, Pengqi Wang, Pan Jiang, Qing Feng

Article Affiliation:

Apei Jiang

Abstract:

Reactivation of tumor suppressor genes by nontoxic bioactive food component represents a promising strategy for cancer chemoprevention. Retinoic acid receptorβ (RARβ), one member of the RAR receptor family, is considered as a tumor suppressor. Reduced expression of RARβ has been reported in lung cancer and other solid tumors. DNA hypermethylation of the promoter region of RARβ is a major mechanism for its silencing in tumors. Recently, curcumin has been considered as a potential DNA methyltransferase inhibitor. Herein, we demonstrated that curcumin significantly elevate RARβ expression at the mRNA and protein levels in tested cancer cells. Additionally, curcumin decreased RARβ promoter methylation in lung cancer A549 and H460 cells. Mechanistic study demonstrated that curcumin was able to downregulate the mRNA levels of DNMT3b. In a lung cancer xenograft node mice model, curcumin exhibited protective effect against weight loss because of tumor burden. Tumor growth was strongly repressed by curcumin treatment. As the results from in vitro, RARβ mRNA were increased and DNMT3b mRNA were decreased by curcumin treatment compared with the mice in control group. Altogether, this study reveals a novel molecular mechanism of curcumin as a chemo-preventive agent for lung cancer through reactivation of RARβ. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley&Sons, Ltd.

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