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Experimental Biology and Medicine 230:235-241 (2005)
© 2005 Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine


ORIGINAL RESEARCH ARTICLE

{gamma}-Tocotrienol Inhibits Neoplastic Mammary Epithelial Cell Proliferation by Decreasing Akt and Nuclear Factor {kappa}B Activity

Sumit J. Shah and Paul W. Sylvester1

School of Pharmacy, University of Louisiana at Monroe, Monroe, Louisiana 71209–0470

To whom requests for reprints should be addressed at 1 School of Pharmacy, 700 University Avenue, University of Louisiana at Monroe, Monroe, LA 71209–0470. E-mail: sylvester{at}ulm.edu

Tocotrienols, a subgroup within the vitamin E family of compounds, have been shown to display potent anticancer activity and inhibit preneoplastic and neoplastic mammary epithelial cell proliferation at treatment doses that have little or no effect on normal cell growth and function. However, the specific intracellular mechanisms mediating the antiproliferative effects of tocotrienols are presently unknown. Because Akt and nuclear factor {kappa}B (NF{kappa}B) are intimately involved in mammary tumor cell proliferation and survival, studies were conducted to determine the effects of {gamma}-tocotrienol on Akt and NF{kappa}B activity in neoplastic +SA mammary epithelial cells in vitro. Treatment with 0–8 µM {gamma}-tocotrienol for 0–3 days caused a dose-responsive inhibition in +SA cell growth and mitotic activity, as determined by MTT colorimetric assay and proliferating cell nuclear antigen immunocytochemical staining, respectively. Studies also showed that treatment with 4 µM {gamma}-tocotrienol, a dose that inhibited +SA cell growth by more than 50% compared with that of untreated control cells, decreased intracellular levels of activated phosphotidylinositol 3-kinase-dependent kinase (PI3K)-dependent kinase 1 (phospho-PDK-1) and Akt, and reduced phospho-Akt kinase activity. Furthermore, these effects were not found to be associated with an increase in either phosphatase and tensin homologue deleted from chromosome 10 (PTEN) or protein phosphatase type 2A phosphatase activity. In addition, {gamma}-tocotrienol treatment was shown to decrease NF{kappa}B transcriptional activity, apparently by suppressing the activation of I{kappa}B-kinase-{alpha}/ß, an enzyme associated with inducing NF{kappa}B activation. In summary, these findings demonstrate that the antiproliferative effects of {gamma}-tocotrienol result, at least in part, from a reduction in Akt and NF{kappa}B activity in neoplastic +SA mammary epithelial cells.

Key Words: tocotrienols • vitamin E • breast cancer • Akt • NF{kappa}B




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