Bioactive Immunomodulatory Compounds: A Novel Combinatorial Strategy for Integrated Medicine in Oncology? BAIC Exposure in Cancer Cells

Bruna Corradetti, Salvatore Vaiasicca, Mauro Mantovani, Edy Virgili, Massimo Bonucci, Ivano Hammarberg Ferri

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Scopus citations

Abstract

The Standardized Cultured Extract of Lentinula edodes Mycelia (also known as Active Hexose Correlated Compound, AHCC) and Wasabia japonica (Wasabi) are natural nutritional supplements known for their immunomodulatory and anticancer potential. The aim of this study was to evaluate the combinatorial effect of the bioactive immunomodulatory compound (BAIC), obtained by combining Wasabi and AHCC, on human breast (MCF-7) and pancreatic (Panc02) adenocarcinoma cell lines. Data obtained revealed that BAIC determines a striking decline in cancer cell growth at minimal concentrations compared with the use of Wasabi and AHCC as single agents. A significant increase in the G0/G1 subpopulation together with a marked augmentation in the percentage of apoptotic cells was demonstrated by flow cytometry, together with a significant upregulation in the expression of genes associated to the apoptotic cascade in both cell lines. The inhibitory role BAIC plays in mammospheres formation from MCF-7-derived cancer stem cells was shown with a marked reduction in size and number. Interestingly, when BAIC was exposed to monocytic cells, no cytotoxic effects were observed. A monocytes-to-macrophages differentiation was rather observed with the concomitant acquisition of an anti-inflammatory phenotype. Taken together, our findings suggest that BAIC could be used as a potential integration of standard chemotherapy treatments because of the improved inhibitory activity on cancer cell proliferation and reduced potential adverse effects.

Original languageEnglish (US)
JournalIntegrative Cancer Therapies
Volume18
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 1 2019

Keywords

  • Active Hexose Correlated Compound
  • Wasabi
  • Wasabia japonica
  • apoptosis
  • cancer cells
  • cell cycle
  • gene regulation
  • glucans
  • immunomodulation
  • integrative medicine
  • paracrine signals

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Oncology
  • Complementary and alternative medicine

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