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Midazolam induces cellular apoptosis in human cancer cells and inhibits tumor growth in xenograft mice

Authors
Mishra, Siddhartha KumarKang, Ju-HeeLee, Chang WooOh, Seung HyunRyu, Jun SunBae, Yun SooKim, Hwan Mook
Issue Date
Sep-2013
Publisher
KOREAN SOC MOLECULAR & CELLULAR BIOLOGY
Keywords
anesthesia; anticancer; midazolam; apoptosis induction; ROS scavenging
Citation
MOLECULES AND CELLS, v.36, no.3, pp.219 - 226
Journal Title
MOLECULES AND CELLS
Volume
36
Number
3
Start Page
219
End Page
226
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/gachon/handle/2020.sw.gachon/14312
DOI
10.1007/s10059-013-0050-9
ISSN
1016-8478
Abstract
Midazolam is a widely used anesthetic of the benzodiazepine class that has shown cytotoxicity and apoptosisinducing activity in neuronal cells and lymphocytes. This study aims to evaluate the effect of midazolam on growth of K562 human leukemia cells and HT29 colon cancer cells. The in vivo effect of midazolam was investigated in BALB/c-nu mice bearing K562 and HT29 cells human tumor xenografts. The results show that midazolam decreased the viability of K562 and HT29 cells by inducing apoptosis and S phase cell-cycle arrest in a concentration-dependent manner. Midazolam activated caspase-9, capspase-3 and PARP indicating induction of the mitochondrial intrinsic pathway of apoptosis. Midazolam lowered mitochondrial membrane potential and increased apoptotic DNA fragmentation. Midazolam showed reactive oxygen species (ROS) scavenging activity through inhibition of NADPH oxidase 2 (Nox2) enzyme activity in K562 cells. Midazolam caused inhibition of pERK1/2 signaling which led to inhibition of the anti-apoptotic proteins Bcl-X-L and XIAP and phosphorylation activation of the pro-apoptotic protein Bid. Midazolam inhibited growth of HT29 tumors in xenograft mice. Collectively our results demonstrate that midazolam caused growth inhibition of cancer cells via activation of the mitochondrial intrinsic pathway of apoptosis and inhibited HT29 tumor growth in xenograft mice. The mechanism underlying these effects of midazolam might be suppression of ROS production leading to modulation of apoptosis and growth regulatory proteins. These findings present possible clinical implications of midazolam as an anesthetic to relieve pain during in vivo anticancer drug delivery and to enhance anticancer efficacy through its ROS-scavenging and pro-apoptotic properties.
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