Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3973278 Reproductive BioMedicine Online 2007 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

Anticancer effects of statins were studied using karyotypically normal human embryonic stem cells (hESC) (HES3), karyotypically abnormal hESC (BG0IV), embryonal carcinoma (NTERA-2), ovarian (TOV-112D) and colorectal cancer (HT-29) cells. The cells were treated with simvastatin, pravastatin, mevastatin and lovastatin in vitro at different concentrations (1–20 μmol/l) and their effects on cell proliferation, apoptosis and stemness-related gene expression were studied. BG01V, NTERA-2 and TOV-112D contained duplications of chromosome 12 and 17. All four statins did not show any inhibition of HES3 proliferation. However, BG01V, NTERA-2, TOV-112D and HT-29 were inhibited by simvastatin, lovastatin and mevastatin. The inhibitory effects were reversed by farnesylpyrophosphate and geranylgeranylpyrophosphate. TUNEL and cell cycle assay revealed evidence of apoptosis in karyotypically abnormal cancer and stem cell types exposed to simvastatin and lovastatin. In addition, following simvastatin treatment, some of the apoptotic and stemness-related genes showed differential expression for the BG01V, NTERA-2, TOV-112D and HT-29 cells in comparison to HES3. In conclusion, the statins inhibit cell proliferation in karyotypically abnormal stem and cancer cells, probably via an increase in activity of key apoptotic genes and the suppression of stemness-related genes on chromosomes 12 and 17.

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