Antimetastatic and anti-invasive ability
of phospho-ascorbyl palmitate through intracellular ascorbate
enrichment and the resultant antioxidant action
Oncol Res 1999;11(10):479-87
Liu JW; Nagao N; Kageyama K; Miwa N
Department of Cell Biochemistry, Hiroshima Prefectural University School
of BioSciences, Shobara, Japan.
A lipophilic and auto-oxidation-resistant derivative of
ascorbic acid (Asc), Asc-2-O-phosphate-6-O-palmitate (Asc2P6Plm),
was shown to exert an invasion-inhibitory action as promptly
as 30-40 min for 50% inhibition and 60-90 min for 80% inhibition
after entering fibrosarcoma HT-1080 cells. Invasive inhibition
of 95-97% was accomplished by Asc2P6Plm of doses exhibiting
no cytotoxicity under the same conditions. Asc2P6Plm was
dephosphorylated and esterolyzed to Asc, which enriched the
intracellular Asc dose dependently in invasion-suppressed
cells, contrasting with no detectable Asc in invasive cells
fed without Asc2P6Plm. Intracellular dehydroAsc (DehAsc),
unexpectedly, amounted to 1.02-1.65-fold as much as intracellular
Asc, suggesting that invasive cells underwent oxidative stress,
the repression of which resulted in both inhibition of tumor
invasion and oxidative conversion of Asc to DehAsc. Correspondingly,
intracellular oxidants fluorometrically detected with a redox
indicator CDCFH were more abundant in invasive cells than
in invasion-suppressed cells fed with Asc2P6Plm. Invasion
inhibitory effects of Asc2P6Plm necessitated the extensive
inhibition of the major gelatinases MMP-9 and MMP-2, as shown
by zymography and Western blots, but did not necessitate
direct expression of the metastasis suppressor gene nm23,
taking as long as 6-18 h in contrast to a prompt action of
Asc2P6Plm. Antimetastatic effects on melanoma B16BL6 cells
were given dose dependently by intravenous administration
or pretreatment with Asc2P6Plm. Thus, Asc2P6Plm is anticipated
as an antimetastatic agent via the potent antioxidant activity. |