Curcumin acts anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic in human

2013 
Meningiomas, the most frequent benign intra- cranial and intraspinal types of tumors are normally removed by surgery. Complications can occur when the tumor is critically localized and cannot be completely removed or when comorbidities of the mostly elder patients increase the general surgical risk. Thus, alternate medical treatment concepts for the therapy of meningiomas would be desirable. Curcumin, the active ingredient of the spice plant Curcuma longa has shown anti-tumorigenic actions in many different types of tumors and therefore, its effect on growth and apoptosis of meningioma cells was studied in the present paper. In vitro, treatment of the human Ben- Men-1 meningioma cell line and of a series of 21 primary human meningioma cell cultures with curcumin (1-20 lM) strongly reduced the proliferation in all cases in a dose dependent manner. Cell cycle analysis by fluorescence- activated cell sorting showed growth arrest at G2/M phase, which was confirmed by demonstrating the corresponding modulation of proteins involved in G2/M arrest by immunoblotting and/or confocal laser microscopy. High dosages (20, 50 lM) of curcumin induced a significant increase of apoptosis in Ben-Men-1 and primary menin- gioma cell cultures as demonstrated by morphological changes of cell nuclei, DNA fragmentation, translocation of cell membrane associated phosphatidyl serine and the induction of apoptotic-acting cleaved caspase-3. Our results suggest that the multi-targeting drug curcumin has potent anti-tumorigenic actions in meningioma cells and might therefore be a putative candidate for the pharmaco- logical treatment of meningiomas.
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