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Identification of medicinal plant extracts that induce murine embryonic stem cell differentiation and potential use towards cancer stem cell therapy

Posted on:2012-03-06Degree:M.SType:Thesis
University:Weill Medical College of Cornell UniversityCandidate:Reynertson, Kurt AFull Text:PDF
GTID:2454390011955472Subject:Biology
Abstract/Summary:
Epidemiological evidence indicates that diets high in fruits and vegetables provide a measure of cancer chemoprevention due to phytochemical constituents. Natural products are a rich source of cancer chemotherapy drugs, and primarily target rapidly-cycling tumor cells. Increasing evidence indicates that many cancers contain small populations of resistant, stem-like cells that have the capacity to regenerate tumors following chemotherapy and radiation, and have been linked to the initiation of metastases. Our goal is to discover natural product-based clinical or dietary interventions that selectively target cancer stem cells, inducing differentiation. We adapted an alkaline phosphatase (AP) stain to assay plant extracts for the capacity to induce differentiation in embryonic stem (ES) cells. AP is a characteristic marker of undifferentiated ES cells, and this represents a novel approach to screening medicinal plant extracts. Following a survey of approximately 100 fractions obtained from twelve species of ethnomedically utilized plants, we found fractions from three species that induced differentiation, decreasing AP and transcript levels of pluripotency markers (Nanog, Oct-4, Rex-1). These fractions affected proliferation of murine ES, and human embryonal, prostate, and breast carcinoma cells in a dose-dependent manner. Several phytochemical constituents were isolated; several antioxidant phytochemicals, including resveratrol and ellagic acid demonstrated promising capacities to affect viability of cultured breast carcinoma cells.
Keywords/Search Tags:Cancer, Plant extracts, Cells, Stem, Differentiation
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