BCL-2 INHIBITS THE APOPTOTIC PATHWAY INDUCED BY VITAMIN E SUCCINATE IN THE SK-BR-3 HUMAN BREAST CANCER CELL LINE
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Date
2001-04
Department
Hood College Biology
Program
Biomedical and Environmental Science
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Abstract
In recent years, one of the areas of intense interest in cancer research has been the
use of naturally occurring compounds as chemotherapeutic agents. Our laboratory, along
with others, has been studying the efficacy of vitamin E succinate (VES), a derivative of
vitamin E, to inhibit the growth of human breast cancer cells. Previously, our laboratory
had shown that VES caused apoptosis, programmed cell death, in certain breast cancer
cell lines, in particular the estrogen receptor-negative SK-BR-3 cell line. VES-induced
apoptosis in this cell line was mediated by Fas, a member of the tumor necrosis factor
receptor-I (TNF-R1) family of death receptors. There are two known pathways for Fas to
cause apoptosis using a family of proteases, the caspases, which can be either dependent
or independent of changes to the mitochondria. In this study, the intracellular pathway in
SK-BR-3 cells by which VES mediates apoptosis through Fas was examined. VESinduced
apoptosis mediated by Fas occurs through altering the function of the
mitochondria by demonstrating the cleavage of key proteins: Bid, caspase-9 and caspase-
3, and the release of cytochrome C from the mitochondria. This apoptosis is blocked by
overexpression of Bc1-2, a known anti-apoptotic protein. The induction of apoptosis in
an estrogen receptor-negative cell line by VES is significant because estrogen receptornegative
breast tumors have been found to be more invasive tumors, resistant to
conventional anti-estrogen therapies, and negative for Bc1-2 expression. The ability of
VES to kill these cells presents a new approach to therapy for the more aggressive breast
tumors.