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Title: Augmentation of intracellular iron using iron sucrose enhances the toxicity of pharmacological ascorbate in colon cancer cells.

Authors: Brandt, Kristin E; Falls, Kelly C; Schoenfeld, Joshua D; Rodman, Samuel N; Gu, Zhimin; Zhan, Fenghuang; Cullen, Joseph J; Wagner, Brett A; Buettner, Garry R; Allen, Bryan G; Berg, Daniel J; Spitz, Douglas R; Fath, Melissa A

Published In Redox Biol, (2018 04)

Abstract: Pharmacological doses (> 1mM) of ascorbate (a.k.a., vitamin C) have been shown to selectively kill cancer cells through a mechanism that is dependent on the generation of H2O2 at doses that are safely achievable in humans using intravenous administration. The process by which ascorbate oxidizes to form H2O2 is thought to be mediated catalytically by redox active metal ions such as iron (Fe). Because intravenous iron sucrose is often administered to colon cancer patients to help mitigate anemia, the current study assessed the ability of pharmacological ascorbate to kill colon cancer cells in the presence and absence of iron sucrose. In vitro survival assays showed that 10mM ascorbate exposure (2h) clonogenically inactivated 40-80% of exponentially growing colon cancer cell lines (HCT116 and HT29). When the H2O2 scavenging enzyme, catalase, was added to the media, or conditionally over-expressed using a doxycycline inducible vector, the toxicity of pharmacological ascorbate was significantly blunted. When colon cancer cells were treated in the presence or absence of 250µM iron sucrose, then rinsed, and treated with 10mM ascorbate, the cells demonstrated increased levels of labile iron that resulted in significantly increased clonogenic cell killing, compared to pharmacological ascorbate alone. Interestingly, when colon cancer cells were treated with iron sucrose for 1h and then 10mM ascorbate was added to the media in the continued presence of iron sucrose, there was no enhancement of toxicity despite similar increases in intracellular labile iron. The combination of iron chelators, deferoxamine and diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid, significantly inhibited the toxicity of either ascorbate alone or ascorbate following iron sucrose. These observations support the hypothesis that increasing intracellular labile iron pools, using iron sucrose, can be used to increase the toxicity of pharmacological ascorbate in human colon cancer cells by a mechanism involving increased generation of H2O2.

PubMed ID: 28886484 Exiting the NIEHS site

MeSH Terms: Ascorbic Acid/toxicity*; Catalase/metabolism; Cell Survival/drug effects; Colonic Neoplasms/metabolism; Colonic Neoplasms/pathology; Deferoxamine/pharmacology; Ferric Compounds/pharmacology*; Ferric Oxide, Saccharated; Glucaric Acid/pharmacology*; HCT116 Cells; HT29 Cells; Humans; Hydrogen Peroxide/metabolism; Iron Chelating Agents/pharmacology; Iron/metabolism*; Oxidative Stress/drug effects*

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