Category Archives: Diseases

Coriolus versicolor (Yunzhi) extract attenuates growth of human leukemia xenografts and induces apoptosis through the mitochondrial pathway

CHEONG-YIP HO, CHI-FAI KIM, KWOK-NAM LEUNG, KWOK-PUI FUNG, TAK-FU TSE, HELEN CHAN and CLARA BIK-SAN LAU

Coriolus versicolor (CV), also called Yunzhi, has been demonstrated to exert anti-tumor effects on various types of cancer cells. Our previous studies have demonstrated that a standardized aqueous ethanol extract prepared from CV inhibited the proliferation of human leukemia cells via induction of apoptosis. The present study aimed to evaluate the underlying mechanisms of apoptosis through modulation of Bax, Bcl-2 and cytochrome c protein expressions in a human pro-myelocytic leukemia (HL-60) cell line, as well as the potential of the CV extract as anti-leukemia agent using the athymic mouse xenograft model. Our results demonstrated that the CV extract dose-dependently suppressed the proliferation of HL-60 cells (IC50=150.6 ?g/ml), with increased nucleosome production from apoptotic cells. Expression of pro-apoptotic protein Bax was significantly up-regulated in HL-60 cells treated with the CV extract, especially after 16 and 24 h. Meanwhile, expression of anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-2 was concomitantly down-regulated, as reflected by the increased Bax/Bcl-2 ratio. The CV extract markedly, but transiently, promoted the release of cytochrome c from mitochondria to cytosol after 24-h incubation. In vivo studies in the athymic nude mouse xenograft model also confirmed the growth-inhibitory activity of the CV extract on human leukemia cells. In conclusion, the CV extract attenuated the human leukemia cell proliferation in vivo, and in vitro possibly by inducing apoptosis through the mitochondrial pathway. The CV extract is likely to be valuable for the treatment of some forms of human leukemia.

Full article: https://mushroomstudies.co/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/Coriolus-versicolor-Yunzhi-extract-attenuates-growth-of-human-leukemia-xenografts-and-induces-apoptosis-through-the-mitochondrial-pathway.pdf

Comparsion of Anti-cancer Effect between two kinds of Polysaccharide Peptide of Coriolus versicolor on Human Tumor Cell Lines in Vitro

L.Z. Xu

In the present study the anti-cancer effect of polysaccharide peptide of Coriolus versicolor Cov-1 (PSP) was compared with polysaccharide peptide of Coriolus versicolor CM-101 (PSK) on four human tumor cell line targets (SGC 7901, stomach cancer cell; SPC, human lung adenocarcinoma cell; SLY, human monocytic leukemia cell and Mei, human skin histiocytic lymphoma cell) in Vitro.
PSP had similar cytotoxic effects upon human tumor cells as PSK, both inhibiting cell growth. In comparison with control specimens, the SPC cell line treated with PSP (1000ug/ml) for 72 hours at 37oC showed marked morphological changes such as cell swelling, chromatin aggregation, formation of polynuclear cells and sawtooth on the surface of cell nuclei.
PSK as a new immunomodulative drug had been widely used for clinical anticancer therapy in Japan. When combined with chemotherapy, radiotherapy and surgical operation, PSK is found to be able to improve the therapeutic effects. In 1983, a polysaccharide peptide of Coriolus versicolor Cov-1 was isolated from the mycelia by Qing-yao Yang. It is possessed of physio-chemical characteristics similar to PSK and designated as PSP. In the present study the anti-cancer effect of PSP was compared with PSK using four human tumor cell line targets in vitro.

Combined effect of prophylactic lymphadenectomy and long term combination chemotherapy for curatively resected carcinoma of the stomach.

Kodama Y, Kano T, Tamada R, Kumashiro R, Okamura T, Inokuchi K.

Effectiveness of prophylactic extensive lymph node dissection (PELD) plus postoperative long term combination chemotherapy (PLCC) for patients with curatively resected gastric carcinoma was assessed in terms of the degree of serosal invasion and lymph node metastasis. Either the Group 1 and Group 2 lymph nodes were eradicated by PELD. PLCC included intermittent intravenous administration of mitomycin C (0.4 mg/kg intraoperatively followed by 0.2 mg/kg every 3 months) and oral administration of Tegafur (600-800 mg/day) and PSK (3.0 g/day), an immunostimulator, for as long a period as possible. PELD alone resulted in a cure when the malignancy was confined to the mucosal and muscular layers of the stomach as well as to the Group 1 lymph nodes. In cases when the carcinoma involved the serosa and/or the Group 2 lymph nodes, the 5 year survival rate was about 55 per cent the PELD and PLCC groups, such being significantly higher than about 27 per cent in the PELD alone group. Therefore, PELD plus PLCC is highly effective for advanced gastric carcinoma, under a condition of curative resection.

CLONING OF SEQUENCES INDUCED AND SUPPRESSED BY ADMINISTRATION OF PSK, ANTITUMOR PROTEIN-BOUND POLYSACCHARIDE

Kunitaka Hirose, Michinori Hakozaki, Kenichi Matsunaga, Chikao Yoshikumi, Tetsuya Hotta, Masaaki Yanagisawa, Mikio Yamamoto, Hideya Endo.

To elucidate the effects of PSK, a protein-bound polysaccharide from Coriolus versicolor, on gene expression in tumor cells, we prepared cDNA clone libraries from PSKtreated and untreated cells of a rat ascites hepatoma line, AH66, which was previously shown to be susceptible to the antitumor action of this compound. Two PSK-induced and one suppressed cDNA clones were selected from these libraries by using a differential colony hybridization and RNA blot hybridization. PSK was thus shown to have a direct effect on the transcription and consequently on the translation of tumor cells.

Full article: https://mushroomstudies.co/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/Cloning-of-sequences-induced-and-suppressed-by-administration-of-PSK-antitumor-protein-bound-polysaccharide.pdf

Clinical study of biological response modifiers as maintenance therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma.

Suto T, Fukuda S, Moriya N, Watanabe Y, Sasaki D, Yoshida Y, Sakata Y.

We conducted a randomized, controlled trial comparing 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) with or without biological response modifiers (BRMs) as a maintenance therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) after treatment with percutaneous ethanol injection (PEI), transcatheter arterial embolization (TAE) or arterial infusion of antitumor agents (AI). A total of 58 cases of HCC were classified into 4 groups as follows: group I, PSK with 5-FU (n = 15); group II, lentinan with 5-FU (n = 15); group III, OK-432 with 5-FU (n = 12); and group IV, 5-FU alone as the control (n = 16). The mean survival time, mortality rate, time to progression, and T4/T8 ratio of lymphocytes in the peripheral blood were compared among the four groups. There was no significant difference in the background factors among the groups. In group I, the T4/T8 ratio of lymphocytes was reduced after the therapy. No significant difference was found among the groups in terms of the mean survival time, mortality rate, or time to progression. PEI for initial therapy was superior to the other therapies in terms of the mean survival time and mortality rate. These results suggest that the addition of BRM to maintenance therapy with 5-FU exerts no prognostic benefit on HCC patients treated with PEI, TAE, or AI.

Clinical results of a randomized controlled trial on the effect of adjuvant immunochemotherapy using Esquinon and Krestin in patients with curatively resected gastric cancer–7-year survival– Cooperative Study Group for Cancer Immunochemotherapy, Tokai Gastrointestinal Oncology Group

Ichihashi H, Kondo T, Nakazato H.

A randomized controlled study was carried out on curatively resected gastric cancer patients in a cooperative study involving 16 institutions in order to evaluate the effect of an alternative long-term adjuvant immunochemotherapy using Esquinon (CQ) and Krestin (PSK). One week after surgery, CQ was given at a dose of 2mg/m2 once a week for 3 weeks and this was repeated every 6 weeks. CQ was administered intravenously in the 1st course and thereafter orally up to 9 courses. Three postoperative week, immunotherapy was then started in which PSK was given orally in 3 divided doses of
2g/m2/day from the day when CQ therapy ended for 4 consecutive weeks, and this performed for every course. Estimated survival rate and cumulative survival curves were compared utilizing the data up to 7 years after surgery in the chemotherapy group given CQ alone and in the immunochemotherapy group given CQ + PSK. The survival curve in all cases showed a favorable form in the CQ + PSK group for up to 36 months, and thereafter it crossed with that of the CQ group for up to 68 months. Both curves twisted at 68 months and then deviated from each other, showing that the effect in the CQ + PSK group beneficial. The curve showed a twisting configuration throughout the treatment period. There was no statistically significant difference between the survival curves of the two groups. Retrospective survival analysis was then performed on separate subgroups classified into the category of S1, S2, N1, and N2. The CQ + PSK group was better than the CQ alone group in its survival rate for the S1 + S2 (N1-2) group, the percentage being 11.5%, and a statistically significant difference was observed between the two groups (p = 0.089).

Clinical Potential of Biological Response Modifiers Combined with Chemotherapy for Gastric Cancer

Masahiko Shibata Takeshi Nezu Shigeru Fujisaki Katsuyuki Andou
Ryouichi Tomita Masahiro Fukuzawa

The most effective treatment for gastric cancer is complete surgical resection with lymphadenectomy. However, a number of patients experience recurrence of the cancer even after curative surgery. This review focuses on comparative trials studying the use of adjuvant therapy with chemotherapy plus immunotherapy in the treatment of patients with curatively resected gastric cancer. Preoperative and intraperitoneal therapy, and therapy for advanced or recurrent gastric cancer are also discussed. At present, some subset analyses of adjuvant trials have shown favorable results suggesting that the biological response modifiers (BRMs), PSK or OK-432, add a benefit to chemotherapy. For advanced gastric cancer, although gastric cancer cells are generally not very sensitive to most of the currently available chemotherapeutic agents, it has been reported that biochemical modulation with treatments including low-dose cisplatin + 5-FU (fluorouracil) have high response rates and exert an immunomodulatory effect especially when used in combination with BRMs. The impact of splenectomy and some of the
promising newly developed drugs are discussed.

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Clinical Implications of PSP in Oncology

T.F. Liu and W.C. Xue

Up to now, the three main weapons against cancer have been surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Although these classical methods of treatment have given fairly good results in general, the results have yet to be improved, especially in late cases. Thus for many years, the search for a more effective means of anti-cancer treatment has been going on world-wide. An ideal drug would of course be one that could directly kill all the cancer cells without harming the normal tissues, and also without causing general toxicity. However, at present a more practical approach is to use drugs that would either enhance the biological effects of radiation or of cytotoxic agents, or strengthen the organism’s immunological defenses. In recent years, several such drugs have been undergoing clinical trials, for example, Misonidazole, RS 2508, OK-432, PSK, etc.

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Clinical Experience in the Use of PSP

W.C. Xue and T.F. Liu

There is no really effective treatment for moderate and advanced stages of esophageal carcinoma. Although surgery for the earlier cases has been able to give a 5 years survival rate of 28.7%, such operable cases are relatively few. By far the greater majority are already in stage III to IV when first seen in the clinic, and radiotherapy alone in these cases has given a 5 years survival rate of only 8-14%. In order to improve treatment results, a variety of chemotherapeutic agents have been used in combination surgery, but so far no really effective drug has been found.
The drug PSP (polysaccharide-peptide of Coriolus versicolor) has been discovered and produced by Professor Qing-yao Yang of. It is a new anti-cancer and immuno-regulatory drug, similar to PSK (Krestin) but the effective component has been found to be larger than PSK. Experimental data has proved these properties of PSP, and in vitro as well as in vivo studies have all proved that PSP is superior to PSK. Of course, as is the case with all new drugs, the ultimate proof of its value will have to be shown by clinical application.
Data on Krestin suggest that this family of drugs when used in combination with radiotherapy, there might be an increase of the biological effects of radiation. To do a pilot study on such a possibility, the authors have treated 41 moderate to advanced cases of esophageal carcinoma with a combination of PSP and radiotherapy.

Chemoimmunotherapy with Krestin in acute leukemia

The purpose of this study was to determine if immunotherapy with Krestin can prolong the durations of complete remission and survival. The patients were placed at random in the chemotherapy and chemoimmunotherapy groups. The median durations of complete remission and survival were longer in the chemoimmunotherapy group than in the chemotherapy group. The complete remission rate of the second induction was higher in the chemoimmunotherapy group than in the chemotherapy group. The cell-mediated immunity was somewhat enhanced in the chemoimmunotherapy group, while it was not enhanced in the chemotherapy group. These results suggested that Krestin administration for maintenance therapy was useful for prolongation of the durations of remission and survival time in patients with acute leukemia.