Curcumin functions as a MEK inhibitor to induce a synthetic lethal effect on KRAS mutant colorectal cancer cells receiving targeted drug regorafenib

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Abstract

Curcumin, a major yellow pigment and spice in turmeric and curry, has been demonstrated to have an anticancer effect in human clinical trials. Mutation of KRAS has been shown in 35%-45% of colorectal cancer, and regorafenib has been approved by the US FDA to treat patients with colorectal cancer. Synthetic lethality is a type of genetic interaction between two genes such that simultaneous perturbations of the two genes result in cell death or a dramatic decrease of cell viability, while a perturbation of either gene alone is not lethal. Here, we reveal that curcumin significantly enhanced the growth inhibition of regorafenib in human colorectal cancer HCT 116 cells (KRAS mutant) to a greater extent than in human colorectal cancer HT-29 cells (KRAS wild-type), producing an additive or synergistic effect in HCT 116 cells and causing an antagonistic effect in HT-29 cells. Flow cytometric analysis showed that the addition of curcumin elevated apoptosis and greatly increased autophagy in HCT 116 cells but not in HT-29 cells. Mechanistically, curcumin behaved like MEK-specific inhibitor (U0126) to enhance regorafenib-induced growth inhibition, apoptosis and autophagy in HCT 116 cells. Our data suggest that curcumin may target one more gene other than mutant KRAS to enhance regorafenib-induced growth inhibition (synthetic lethality) in colorectal cancer HCT 116 cells, indicating a possible role of curcumin in regorafenib-treated KRAS mutant colorectal cancer.

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Wu, C. S., Wu, S. Y., Chen, H. C., Chu, C. A., Tang, H. H., Liu, H. S., … Su, C. L. (2019). Curcumin functions as a MEK inhibitor to induce a synthetic lethal effect on KRAS mutant colorectal cancer cells receiving targeted drug regorafenib. Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry, 74. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jnutbio.2019.108227

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