Inhibitory effect of curcumin on the invasion of rat ascites hepatoma cells in vitro and ex vivo

Cytotechnology. 2001 Jan;35(1):57-63. doi: 10.1023/A:1008167502110.

Abstract

Curcumin, a yellow pigment in turmeric, is a food factor withantioxidative activity. The effect of curcumin on the proliferation and invasion of the rat ascites hepatoma AH109Acells was studied in vitro and ex vivo assay systems. Especially, a co-culture system of the hepatoma cellswith mesothelial cells derived from rat mesentery was employed to investigate the invasive motility. Curcumin suppressed thehepatoma slipping motility in a dose-dependent manner up to 5 muM and thereafter maintained the effect up to 20 muM, whereas this substance exerted little influence on the proliferation of the hepatoma cells at the same concentrations. Sera obtained from rats orally given curcumin also inhibited the AH109A cellular invasive movement when added to the culturemedium. Hepatoma cells previously cultured with hypoxanthineand xanthine oxidase showed a highly invasive activity. Curcumin and curcumin-loaded rat sera suppressed this reactive oxygen species-potentiated invasive capacity by simultaneously treating AH109A cells with hypoxanthine, xanthine oxidase and either of curcumin samples. These resultssuggest that the antioxidative property of curcumin may beinvolved in its anti-invasive action.