Camel Milk Exosomes Potentiate The Anticancer Effect of Doxorubicin on Multidrug-Resistant Human Leukemia Hl60 Cells in Vitro and in Vivo
Rashad Qasem Ali Othman, Abdelnaser A. Badawy, Mohammed M. Alruwaili, Mohammed A. El-magd
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ABSTRACT
Background: Multidrug resistance (MDR) is one of the strategies developed by
cancer cells to inhibit the anticancer potential of the majority of
chemotherapeutic agents and almost results in treatment
failure.
Objective:
This
study aimed to evaluate the therapeutic
potential of camel milk exosomes (CME) on multidrug-resistant
human acute promyelocytic leukemia HL60 cells (HL60/RS) and to
investigate whether this CME could potentiate the anticancer effect of
Doxorubicin (DOX) and decrease its side effects.
Results: CME
alone or combined with DOX significantly induced HL60/RS cell
viability loss, apoptosis, and cell cycle arrest at the G0/G1 phase,
and downregulated MDR genes (Abcb1,
Abcc1, Abcg2) as compared to cells treated with DOX alone.
Additionally, CME and DOX co-treated nude mice had the lowest
tumor volume, Abcb1, Abcc1, Abcg2, and Bcl2 expression, and the highest Bax and caspase3 expression
in HL60/RS xenografts. This combined
therapy also decreased DOX adverse effects as revealed by decreased liver
damage enzymes and lipid peroxide (MDA) and increased hepatic antioxidant enzymes
(SOD, CAT, GPx).
Conclusion: CME increased
sensitivity of HL60/RS to DOX
through, at least in part, reduction of MDR genes, induction
of apoptosis, and cell cycle arrest. Thus, CME may be used as safe adjuvants to DOX during cancer treatment.
Keywords: Camel milk exosomes; Myeloid leukemia; HL60;
Apoptosis; MDR