Pharmacological Research - Modern Chinese Medicine (Mar 2022)

Curcumin induces immunogenic cell death in murine colorectal carcinoma CT26 cells

  • Rayane Ganassin,
  • Giulia Rosa Tavares Oliveira,
  • Márcia Cristina Oliveira da Rocha,
  • José Athayde Vasconcelos Morais,
  • Mosar Corrêa Rodrigues,
  • Flávia Nader Motta,
  • Ricardo Bentes Azevedo,
  • Luís Alexandre Muehlmann

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2
p. 100046

Abstract

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Different stressors of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) can trigger immunogenic cell death (ICD), a modality of regulated cell death that can be therapeutically used to induce antitumor immune responses. Curcumin has been pointed out as an ER stressor, but its potential activity as an ICD inducer has not been studied. Thus, the goal of this work was to investigate whether curcumin triggers ICD in murine colorectal carcinoma CT26 cells in vitro. The results show that CT26 cells treated with curcumin underwent apoptosis and exposed damage-associated molecular patterns, namely calreticulin, HSP90, HMGB1, ATP and IL-1β. Curcumin-treated CT26 cells also exhibited increased expression of XBP1, which is suggestive of ER stress. In an in vivo vaccination-challenge model, curcumin-treated CT26 cells were immunogenic, rendering 80 to 100% of the BALB/c mice resistant to a subsequent challenge with viable CT26 cells. Taken together, these results suggest that curcumin is an ICD inducer and can potentially be used to induce antitumor immune responses.

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