Eugenol causes melanoma growth suppression through inhibition of E2F1
transcriptional activity.
Ghosh R, Nadiminty N, Fitzpatrick JE, Alworth WL, Slaga TJ, Kumar AP.
Department of Cancer Causation and Prevention, AMC Cancer Research Center, 1600
Pierce St., Denver, CO 80214, USA. ghoshr@amc.org
Metastatic malignant melanoma is an extremely aggressive cancer, with no
currently viable therapy. 4-Allyl-2-methoxyphenol (eugenol) was tested for its
ability to inhibit proliferation of melanoma cells. Eugenol but not its isomer,
isoeugenol (2-methoxy-4-propenylphenol), was found to be a potent inhibitor of
melanoma cell proliferation. In a B16 xenograft study, eugenol treatment
produced a significant tumor growth delay (p = 0.0057), an almost 40% decrease
in tumor size, and a 19% increase in the median time to end point. More
significantly, 50% of the animals in the control group died from metastatic
growth, whereas none in the treatment group showed any signs of invasion or
metastasis. Eugenol was well tolerated as determined by measurement of
bodyweights. Examination of the mechanism of the antiproliferative action of
eugenol in the human malignant melanoma cell line, WM1205Lu, showed that it
arrests cells in the S phase of the cell cycle. Flow cytometry coupled with
biochemical analyses demonstrated that eugenol induced apoptosis. cDNA array
analysis showed that eugenol caused deregulation of the E2F family of
transcription factors. Transient transfection assays and electrophoretic
mobility shift assays showed that eugenol inhibits the transcriptional activity
of E2F1. Overexpression of E2F1 restored about 75% of proliferation ability in
cultures. These results indicate that deregulation of E2F1 may be a key factor
in eugenol-mediated melanoma growth inhibition both in vitro and in vivo. Since
the E2F transcription factors provide growth impetus for the continuous
proliferation of melanoma cells, these results suggest that eugenol could be
developed as an E2F-targeted agent for melanoma treatment.
PMID: 15574415 [PubMed - in process]