Antiproliferative effect of ascorbic acid is associated with the inhibition of genes necessary to cell cycle progression.

BACKGROUND: Ascorbic acid (AA), or Vitamin C, is most well known as a nutritional supplement with antioxidant properties. Recently, we demonstrated that high concentrations of AA act on PMP22 gene expression and partially correct the Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease phenotype in a mouse model. This is du...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sophie Belin, Ferdinand Kaya, Ghislaine Duisit, Sarah Giacometti, Joseph Ciccolini, Michel Fontés
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2009-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2634969?pdf=render
id doaj-c5a1f1d1e19d4193b2f995b0adcb30c4
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c5a1f1d1e19d4193b2f995b0adcb30c42020-11-25T01:48:09ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032009-01-0142e440910.1371/journal.pone.0004409Antiproliferative effect of ascorbic acid is associated with the inhibition of genes necessary to cell cycle progression.Sophie BelinFerdinand KayaGhislaine DuisitSarah GiacomettiJoseph CiccoliniMichel FontésBACKGROUND: Ascorbic acid (AA), or Vitamin C, is most well known as a nutritional supplement with antioxidant properties. Recently, we demonstrated that high concentrations of AA act on PMP22 gene expression and partially correct the Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease phenotype in a mouse model. This is due to the capacity of AA, but not other antioxidants, to down-modulate cAMP intracellular concentration by a competitive inhibition of the adenylate cyclase enzymatic activity. Because of the critical role of cAMP in intracellular signalling, we decided to explore the possibility that ascorbic acid could modulate the expression of other genes. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Using human pangenomic microarrays, we found that AA inhibited the expression of two categories of genes necessary for cell cycle progression, tRNA synthetases and translation initiation factor subunits. In in vitro assays, we demonstrated that AA induced the S-phase arrest of proliferative normal and tumor cells. Highest concentrations of AA leaded to necrotic cell death. However, quiescent cells were not susceptible to AA toxicity, suggesting the blockage of protein synthesis was mainly detrimental in metabolically-active cells. Using animal models, we found that high concentrations of AA inhibited tumor progression in nude mice grafted with HT29 cells (derived from human colon carcinoma). Consistently, expression of tRNA synthetases and ieF2 appeared to be specifically decreased in tumors upon AA treatment. CONCLUSIONS: AA has an antiproliferative activity, at elevated concentration that could be obtained using IV injection. This activity has been observed in vitro as well in vivo and likely results from the inhibition of expression of genes involved in protein synthesis. Implications for a clinical use in anticancer therapies will be discussed.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2634969?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sophie Belin
Ferdinand Kaya
Ghislaine Duisit
Sarah Giacometti
Joseph Ciccolini
Michel Fontés
spellingShingle Sophie Belin
Ferdinand Kaya
Ghislaine Duisit
Sarah Giacometti
Joseph Ciccolini
Michel Fontés
Antiproliferative effect of ascorbic acid is associated with the inhibition of genes necessary to cell cycle progression.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Sophie Belin
Ferdinand Kaya
Ghislaine Duisit
Sarah Giacometti
Joseph Ciccolini
Michel Fontés
author_sort Sophie Belin
title Antiproliferative effect of ascorbic acid is associated with the inhibition of genes necessary to cell cycle progression.
title_short Antiproliferative effect of ascorbic acid is associated with the inhibition of genes necessary to cell cycle progression.
title_full Antiproliferative effect of ascorbic acid is associated with the inhibition of genes necessary to cell cycle progression.
title_fullStr Antiproliferative effect of ascorbic acid is associated with the inhibition of genes necessary to cell cycle progression.
title_full_unstemmed Antiproliferative effect of ascorbic acid is associated with the inhibition of genes necessary to cell cycle progression.
title_sort antiproliferative effect of ascorbic acid is associated with the inhibition of genes necessary to cell cycle progression.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2009-01-01
description BACKGROUND: Ascorbic acid (AA), or Vitamin C, is most well known as a nutritional supplement with antioxidant properties. Recently, we demonstrated that high concentrations of AA act on PMP22 gene expression and partially correct the Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease phenotype in a mouse model. This is due to the capacity of AA, but not other antioxidants, to down-modulate cAMP intracellular concentration by a competitive inhibition of the adenylate cyclase enzymatic activity. Because of the critical role of cAMP in intracellular signalling, we decided to explore the possibility that ascorbic acid could modulate the expression of other genes. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Using human pangenomic microarrays, we found that AA inhibited the expression of two categories of genes necessary for cell cycle progression, tRNA synthetases and translation initiation factor subunits. In in vitro assays, we demonstrated that AA induced the S-phase arrest of proliferative normal and tumor cells. Highest concentrations of AA leaded to necrotic cell death. However, quiescent cells were not susceptible to AA toxicity, suggesting the blockage of protein synthesis was mainly detrimental in metabolically-active cells. Using animal models, we found that high concentrations of AA inhibited tumor progression in nude mice grafted with HT29 cells (derived from human colon carcinoma). Consistently, expression of tRNA synthetases and ieF2 appeared to be specifically decreased in tumors upon AA treatment. CONCLUSIONS: AA has an antiproliferative activity, at elevated concentration that could be obtained using IV injection. This activity has been observed in vitro as well in vivo and likely results from the inhibition of expression of genes involved in protein synthesis. Implications for a clinical use in anticancer therapies will be discussed.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2634969?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT sophiebelin antiproliferativeeffectofascorbicacidisassociatedwiththeinhibitionofgenesnecessarytocellcycleprogression
AT ferdinandkaya antiproliferativeeffectofascorbicacidisassociatedwiththeinhibitionofgenesnecessarytocellcycleprogression
AT ghislaineduisit antiproliferativeeffectofascorbicacidisassociatedwiththeinhibitionofgenesnecessarytocellcycleprogression
AT sarahgiacometti antiproliferativeeffectofascorbicacidisassociatedwiththeinhibitionofgenesnecessarytocellcycleprogression
AT josephciccolini antiproliferativeeffectofascorbicacidisassociatedwiththeinhibitionofgenesnecessarytocellcycleprogression
AT michelfontes antiproliferativeeffectofascorbicacidisassociatedwiththeinhibitionofgenesnecessarytocellcycleprogression
_version_ 1725012607199346688