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. 2007 Feb 15;120(4):906-17.
doi: 10.1002/ijc.22332.

In vitro and in vivo molecular evidence of genistein action in augmenting the efficacy of cisplatin in pancreatic cancer

Affiliations

In vitro and in vivo molecular evidence of genistein action in augmenting the efficacy of cisplatin in pancreatic cancer

Sanjeev Banerjee et al. Int J Cancer. .

Erratum in

  • Int J Cancer. 2014 Apr 15;134(8):E4

Retraction in

  • Retraction.
    [No authors listed] [No authors listed] Int J Cancer. 2016 Nov 1;139(9):2145-6. doi: 10.1002/ijc.30269. Int J Cancer. 2016. PMID: 27534917

Abstract

We recently reported the potential of genistein in augmenting gemcitabine-induced killing of pancreatic cancer (Banerjee, S. et al., Cancer Research 2005;65:9064-72). Since cis-diaminedichloroplatinum (II) (cisplatin) is widely used against solid tumors, we further investigated whether genistein pretreatment could be used as a novel strategy for cisplatin-induced killing of pancreatic cancer cells in vitro and enhanced antitumor activity in vivo. Our in vitro results showed that pretreatment of cells with genistein followed by cisplatin resulted in significant loss of cell viability and potentiated apoptosis irrespective of the metastatic ability of cells. Mechanistically, genistein augmented cisplatin induced killing by down regulating transcription factor-NF-kappaB and anti-apoptotic Akt expression. NF-kappaB was found upregulated when pancreatic cancer cells were exposed to cisplatin, suggesting the potential mechanism of acquired chemo-resistance. In addition, we also showed, for the first time, that genistein in combination with cisplatin is more effective antitumor agent in our orthotopic tumor model. But most importantly, our data also showed that a specific target, such as NF-kappaB, was inactivated in animal tumors treated with genistein and cisplatin. Immunohistochemical data showed reduced staining for phospho-p65, Bcl-xL and MMP-9 in treated tumors compared to control tumors, but the lowest activity was seen in the combination group. These results provide strong molecular in vivo evidence in support of our hypothesis that inactivation of the NF-kappaB signaling pathway by genistein results in the chemo-sensitization of pancreatic tumors to cisplatin, which is likely to be an important and novel strategy for the treatment of pancreatic cancer.

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