Synergistic Effect of Vitamin C with Cisplatin for Inhibiting Proliferation of Gastric Cancer Cells

Background: Ascorbic acid, known as vitamin C, has been used in combination with a number of cytotoxic agents in vitro and in vivo with contradictory results on its effectiveness. It is believed that vitamin C can sensitize different cancer cells to common therapy strategies such as chemotherapy and...

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Main Authors: Ghazaleh Ghavami, Soroush Sardari
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pasteur Institute of Iran 2020-03-01
Series:Iranian Biomedical Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ibj.pasteur.ac.ir/article-1-2918-en.html
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spelling doaj-bca820fdf3234a5098492c8f87cc709a2020-11-25T02:18:05ZengPasteur Institute of IranIranian Biomedical Journal1028-852X2008-823X2020-03-01242119127Synergistic Effect of Vitamin C with Cisplatin for Inhibiting Proliferation of Gastric Cancer CellsGhazaleh Ghavami0Soroush Sardari1 Drug Design and Bioinformatics Unit, Medical Biotechnology Department, Biotechnology Research Center, Pasteur Institute of Iran, Tehran, Iran Drug Design and Bioinformatics Unit, Medical Biotechnology Department, Biotechnology Research Center, Pasteur Institute of Iran, Tehran, Iran Background: Ascorbic acid, known as vitamin C, has been used in combination with a number of cytotoxic agents in vitro and in vivo with contradictory results on its effectiveness. It is believed that vitamin C can sensitize different cancer cells to common therapy strategies such as chemotherapy and radiotherapy. During current research, the combination effect of vitamin C with cisplatin was evaluated against gastric cancer cells. Methods: MTT-based proliferation assay, combination index method, and flow cytometry technique were employed for the assessment of cell cycle and determination of apoptosis/necrosis on the AGS cell line. Results: Co-treatment of gastric cancer cells with vitamin C in its IC50 dose in addition to cisplatin in both IC50 (10 µg/ml) and five times less (2 µg/ml) doses could increase the cytotoxicity effect of cisplatin in a synergistic manner. Moreover, the pointed co-treatment approach could induce the cell count in sub-G0 phase while reducing it in the G0/G1, G2/M, and S phases. Further findings showed that the combined dose of vitamin C and cisplatin could increase the percentage of apoptotic and necrotic cells in comparison with a single dose of cisplatin. Conclusion: This study introduces a possible approach for the treatment of gastric cancer with more potency and less amount of administered cisplatin to induce toxicity.http://ibj.pasteur.ac.ir/article-1-2918-en.htmlascorbic acidcisplatinneoplasms
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ghazaleh Ghavami
Soroush Sardari
spellingShingle Ghazaleh Ghavami
Soroush Sardari
Synergistic Effect of Vitamin C with Cisplatin for Inhibiting Proliferation of Gastric Cancer Cells
Iranian Biomedical Journal
ascorbic acid
cisplatin
neoplasms
author_facet Ghazaleh Ghavami
Soroush Sardari
author_sort Ghazaleh Ghavami
title Synergistic Effect of Vitamin C with Cisplatin for Inhibiting Proliferation of Gastric Cancer Cells
title_short Synergistic Effect of Vitamin C with Cisplatin for Inhibiting Proliferation of Gastric Cancer Cells
title_full Synergistic Effect of Vitamin C with Cisplatin for Inhibiting Proliferation of Gastric Cancer Cells
title_fullStr Synergistic Effect of Vitamin C with Cisplatin for Inhibiting Proliferation of Gastric Cancer Cells
title_full_unstemmed Synergistic Effect of Vitamin C with Cisplatin for Inhibiting Proliferation of Gastric Cancer Cells
title_sort synergistic effect of vitamin c with cisplatin for inhibiting proliferation of gastric cancer cells
publisher Pasteur Institute of Iran
series Iranian Biomedical Journal
issn 1028-852X
2008-823X
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Background: Ascorbic acid, known as vitamin C, has been used in combination with a number of cytotoxic agents in vitro and in vivo with contradictory results on its effectiveness. It is believed that vitamin C can sensitize different cancer cells to common therapy strategies such as chemotherapy and radiotherapy. During current research, the combination effect of vitamin C with cisplatin was evaluated against gastric cancer cells. Methods: MTT-based proliferation assay, combination index method, and flow cytometry technique were employed for the assessment of cell cycle and determination of apoptosis/necrosis on the AGS cell line. Results: Co-treatment of gastric cancer cells with vitamin C in its IC50 dose in addition to cisplatin in both IC50 (10 µg/ml) and five times less (2 µg/ml) doses could increase the cytotoxicity effect of cisplatin in a synergistic manner. Moreover, the pointed co-treatment approach could induce the cell count in sub-G0 phase while reducing it in the G0/G1, G2/M, and S phases. Further findings showed that the combined dose of vitamin C and cisplatin could increase the percentage of apoptotic and necrotic cells in comparison with a single dose of cisplatin. Conclusion: This study introduces a possible approach for the treatment of gastric cancer with more potency and less amount of administered cisplatin to induce toxicity.
topic ascorbic acid
cisplatin
neoplasms
url http://ibj.pasteur.ac.ir/article-1-2918-en.html
work_keys_str_mv AT ghazalehghavami synergisticeffectofvitamincwithcisplatinforinhibitingproliferationofgastriccancercells
AT soroushsardari synergisticeffectofvitamincwithcisplatinforinhibitingproliferationofgastriccancercells
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