Induction of autophagy by concanavalin A and its application in anti-tumor therapy
- PMID: 17471013
- DOI: 10.4161/auto.4280
Induction of autophagy by concanavalin A and its application in anti-tumor therapy
Abstract
Concanavalin A (Con A), a lectin from Jack bean seeds that, once bound to the mannose moiety on the cell membrane glycoprotein, is internalized preferentially to the mitochondria. A BNIP3-mediated mitochondria autophagy is then induced, and causes the tumor cells to undergo autophagic cell death. Con A is also a T cell mitogen that can induce autoimmune hepatitis in mice. Because of the dual properties (autophagic cytotoxicity and immunomodulation) via the specific mannose binding, Con A can exert a potent anti-hepatoma therapeutic effect by inhibiting tumor nodule formation in the liver and prolonging the survival of the tumor-bearing mice. The anti-tumor effect is primarily mediated by activated CD8(+) T cells, and will also establish a tumor antigen-specific immune memory during the hepatic inflammation. This finding provides a novel mechanism in which Con A can be used as an anti-hepatoma agent, and also gives support for the search for natural lectins as anti-cancer compounds.
Comment on
-
Concanavalin A induces autophagy in hepatoma cells and has a therapeutic effect in a murine in situ hepatoma model.Hepatology. 2007 Feb;45(2):286-96. doi: 10.1002/hep.21509. Hepatology. 2007. PMID: 17256764
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Research Materials