Artemisinin + ALA: "Combination of a... - Advanced Prostate...

Advanced Prostate Cancer

21,002 members26,180 posts

Artemisinin + ALA: "Combination of anti-malarial drug and photosensitizer could effectively kill cancer cells" Sept 18, 2017

JLS1 profile image
JLS1
1 Reply

Combination of anti-malarial drug and photosensitizer could effectively kill cancer cells

news-medical.net/news/20170...

Combination of anti-malarial drug and photosensitizer could effectively kill cancer cells

Download PDF Copy

September 18, 2017

Artemisinin-ALA co-treatment could kill cancer cells and suppress tumor growth with fewer side effects

Artemisinin, a potent anti-malarial drug, has been widely hailed as a promising alternative cancer treatment. Scientists from the National University of Singapore (NUS) recently showed that its anti-cancer properties could be enhanced by 10 folds when used in combination with Aminolaevulinic acid (ALA), a photosensitizer or a drug which, upon exposure to light, leads to generation of free radicals that can kill cells.

ALA is used in photodynamic therapy, in combination with a special light source, to treat various types of cancer, including skin and prostate cancer.

A team led by Dr Lin Qingsong from the Department of Biological Sciences at NUS Faculty of Science, together with Dr Wang Jigang and Professor Shen Han-Ming from the Department of Physiology at NUS Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, recently discovered that a combination of artemisinin and ALA could kill colorectal cancer cells and suppress tumor growth more effectively than administering artemisinin alone.

"Artemisinin and ALA are both existing drugs that are well tolerated by the human body. As such, this promising cancer treatment could have fewer side effects," explained Dr Wang.

The findings of the study were published in the scientific journal ACS Central Science in July 2017 as the cover story.

Understanding how artemisinin kills cancer cells

Dr Lin said, "Artemisinin has been reported to possess anti-cancer activities in recent years, but the mechanism of the drug has not been well understood. In this study, we found that the anti-cancer mechanism of artemisinin resembles its action towards malaria parasites."

The research team had previously conducted a study on the antimalarial mechanism of artemisinin and its potent parasite-killing effect. The study showed that artemisinin is activated by haem, an iron containing compound that is an essential component of many biologically important proteins such as hemoglobin and many metabolic pathway enzymes. Malaria parasites rely on hemoglobin as their food when they reside in red blood cells. Digestion of hemoglobin by the parasites releases large amount of haem, leading to activation of artemisinin in the parasites, attacking multiple proteins that are essential for their survival and thus killing them.

Related Stories

Men who follow Mediterranean diet have lower risk of aggressive prostate cancer, study finds

Oncologists discover cell type that gives rise to soft tissue cancer in children

New way to identify breast cancer patients who may develop incurable secondary tumors

In this recent study, the researchers found that cancer cells have higher haem levels as compared to the non-cancer cells, and an elevated haem biosynthesis pathway. This is likely because cancer cells have higher rates of metabolism, and many metabolic pathway enzymes require haem for their activities. Upon activation by haem in cancer cells, artemisinin attacks more than 300 proteins, many of which are important for the survival of cancer cells.

Novel combination therapy for cancer

Guided by this mechanism, the team also discovered that the anti-cancer activity of artemisinin can be further enhanced with addition of ALA, a clinically used haem synthesis precursor, to increase haem levels inside the cancer cells. NUS researchers found that ALA co-treatment significantly enhanced the killing effect of artemisinin against colorectal cancer cells, whereas the drug combination has minimal effect on the non-cancer cells.

Prof Shen added, "Having developed a better understanding of the anti-cancer activity of artemisinin in colorectal cancer, we will also be testing this combination treatment on other cancer types, such as liver cancer."

Source:

news.nus.edu.sg/press-relea...

Be the first to rate this article

Currently .0/5 Stars.

1

2

3

4

5

Posted in: Medical Research News | Medical Condition News | Pharmaceutical News

Tags: Artemisinin, Blood, Cancer, Cancer Treatment, Colorectal, Colorectal Cancer, Compound, Digestion, Drugs, Hemoglobin, Light, Liver, Liver Cancer, Malaria, Metabolism, Photodynamic Therapy, Physiology, Prostate, Prostate Cancer, Red Blood Cells, Skin, Tumor

Comments (0)

Download PDF Copy

Written by
JLS1 profile image
JLS1
To view profiles and participate in discussions please or .
Read more about...
1 Reply
BigRich profile image
BigRich

How many years do you believe it will take to have it utilized in clinical practice? If it is ever utilized in private practice, the drug will be utilized off label. To be used in private practice, maybe in five or ten years.

Rich

You may also like...

Anti-proliferative effect of Cannabidiol in Prostate cancer cell PC3

CBD and prostate cancer Anti-proliferative effect of Cannabidiol in Prostate cancer cell PC3 is...

CBD effects apoptosis in all 4 PCa cell lines -- significantly enhanced the anti‐cancer effects of bicalutamide

from LNCaP cells. In these tumours, CBD also significantly enhanced the anti‐cancer effects of...

Ivermectin for Cancer

metastasis of cancer cells and promotes cancer cell death at doses that are nontoxic to normal...

Vitamin K and its analogs: & PCa

potential anticancer activity in several cancer types including prostate cancer. Previous in vitro...

I am the delivery man these days! Optimizing existing therapies!

The study explores a new method for cancer treatment combining light-activated therapy with a...