78 research outputs found
Investigation of the key chemical structures involved in the anticancer activity of disulfiram in A549 non-small cell lung cancer cell line
© 2018 The Author(s). Background: Disulfiram (DS), an antialcoholism medicine, demonstrated strong anticancer activity in the laboratory but did not show promising results in clinical trials. The anticancer activity of DS is copper dependent. The reaction of DS and copper generates reactive oxygen species (ROS). After oral administration in the clinic, DS is enriched and quickly metabolised in the liver. The associated change of chemical structure may make the metabolites of DS lose its copper-chelating ability and disable their anticancer activity. The anticancer chemical structure of DS is still largely unknown. Elucidation of the relationship between the key chemical structure of DS and its anticancer activity will enable us to modify DS and speed its translation into cancer therapeutics. Methods: The cytotoxicity, extracellular ROS activity, apoptotic effect of DS, DDC and their analogues on cancer cells and cancer stem cells were examined in vitro by MTT assay, western blot, extracellular ROS assay and sphere-reforming assay. Results: Intact thiol groups are essential for the in vitro cytotoxicity of DS. S-methylated diethyldithiocarbamate (S-Me-DDC), one of the major metabolites of DS in liver, completely lost its in vitro anticancer activity. In vitro cytotoxicity of DS was also abolished when its thiuram structure was destroyed. In contrast, modification of the ethyl groups in DS had no significant influence on its anticancer activity. Conclusions: The thiol groups and thiuram structure are indispensable for the anticancer activity of DS. The liver enrichment and metabolism may be the major obstruction for application of DS in cancer treatment. A delivery system to protect the thiol groups and development of novel soluble copper-DDC compound may pave the path for translation of DS into cancer therapeutics.This work was supported by grant from British Lung Foundation (RG14–8) and Innovate UK (104022).Published versio
Liposome encapsulated Disulfiram inhibits NFκB pathway and targets breast cancer stem cells in vitro and in vivo
Breast cancer stem cells (BCSCs) are pan-resistant to different anticancer agents
and responsible for cancer relapse. Disulfiram (DS), an antialcoholism drug, targets
CSCs and reverses pan-chemoresistance. The anticancer application of DS is limited
by its very short half-life in the bloodstream. This prompted us to develop a liposomeencapsulated
DS (Lipo-DS) and examine its anticancer effect and mechanisms in vitro
and in vivo.
The relationship between hypoxia and CSCs was examined by in vitro comparison
of BC cells cultured in spheroid and hypoxic conditions. To determine the importance
of NFκB activation in bridging hypoxia and CSC-related pan-resistance, the CSC
characters and drug sensitivity in BC cell lines were observed in NFκB p65 transfected
cell lines. The effect of Lipo-DS on the NFκB pathway, CSCs and chemosensitivity was
investigated in vitro and in vivo.
The spheroid cultured BC cells manifested CSC characteristics and pan-resistance
to anticancer drugs. This was related to the hypoxic condition in the spheres. Hypoxia
induced activation of NFκB and chemoresistance. Transfection of BC cells with NFκB
p65 also induced CSC characters and pan-resistance. Lipo-DS blocked NFκB activation
and specifically targeted CSCs in vitro. Lipo-DS also targeted the CSC population in
vivo and showed very strong anticancer efficacy. Mice tolerated the treatment very
well and no significant in vivo nonspecific toxicity was observed.
Hypoxia induced NFκB activation is responsible for stemness and chemoresistance
in BCSCs. Lipo-DS targets NFκB pathway and CSCs. Further study may translate DS
into cancer therapeutics
Benefit Incidence of Public Transfers: Evidence from the People's Republic of China
Benefit incidence analyses provide important insights into problems facing any government struggling to deliver essential and equitable social services. Utilizing the framework o f the National Transfer Accounts Project, this paper analyzes the benefit incidence o f public transfers across generations and socioeconomic groups in the People’s Republic of China in 2009. Public education transfers were equally distributed by residence, gender, and income groups at the primary and secondary levels but favored city dwellers, females, and the wealthy at the tertiary level. Public health-care programs tended to equally target the young and middle-aged from different socioeconomic groups but tilted toward urban dwellers, males, and higher income groups at older ages. Public pension spending strongly favored high-income groups, with rural residents, females, and lower income groups receiving greatly reduced benefits. O ur results also indicate that total public spending favored elderly people as spending per person 65 years and older was twice that per child younger than 19. In the next 10 or 20 years, the government should endeavor to improve and strengthen public support systems. In addition to this effort, the currently fragmented health insurance system and pension system should move toward a unified system to reduce inequalities in benefit incidence acros
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