Anti-metastatic effect of an autooxidation-resistant and lipophilic ascorbic acid derivative through inhibition of tumor invasion.
Sleutelwoorden
Abstract
The invasion of human fibrosarcoma HT-1080 cells through Matrigel was shown to be inhibited by pretreatment with ascorbic acid (Asc) or its four derivatives, such as Asc-6-O-palmitate (Asc6Plm), Asc-2-O-phosphate (Asc2P), Asc-2-O-phosphate-6-O-palmitate (Asc2P6Plm), and Asc-5,6-benzylidene (Asc5,6Bz) of non-cytotoxic concentrations for 1 or 18 hr. Two lipophilic derivatives such as Asc6Plm and Asc2P6Plm exerted an invasiveness-inhibitory activity more markedly with 1-hr pretreatment, being a more practical index in terms of the plasma half-life, than Asc, Asc5,6Bz or Asc2P being less lipophilic. Considerably less cytotoxicity (a > 3.3-fold higher IC50 for 1-hr pretreatment) of Asc2P6Plm sufficiently compensated a slightly lower invasiveness-inhibitory activity (a < 1.8-fold higher EC50) as compared with Asc6Plm. Pulmonary metastasis of mouse melanoma B16BL6 cells injected into the tail vein was also inhibited by intravenous administration with Asc2P6Plm dose-dependently. Thus Asc2P6Plm, a lipophilicity-hydrophilicity balanced molecule protectively blockd in the autooxidation-prone moiety, is anticipated as a potent anti-metastatic agent via inhibition of tumor invasion.