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(Journal of Nutrition. 2001;131:3294-3302.)
© 2001 The American Society for Nutritional Sciences


Articles

Indole-3-Carbinol and Diindolylmethane Induce Apoptosis of Human Cervical Cancer Cells and in Murine HPV16-Transgenic Preneoplastic Cervical Epithelium1 ,2

Da-Zhi Chen*, Mei Qi*, Karen J. Auborn* and Timothy H. Carter*,{dagger}3,{dagger}

* North Shore-Long Island Jewish Research Institute, Manhasset, NY 11030 and Department of Otolaryngology, Long Island Jewish Medical Center, The Long Island Campus of Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New Hyde Park, NY 11030; and {dagger} Department of Biological Sciences, St. John’s University, Jamaica, NY 11439

3To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: carterth{at}aol.com.

Dietary indole-3-carbinol (I3C) has clinical benefits for both cervical cancer and laryngeal papillomatosis, and causes apoptosis of breast cancer cells in vitro. We asked whether I3C and its major acid-catalyzed condensation product diindolylmethane (DIM), which is produced in the stomach after consumption of cruciferous vegetables, could induce apoptosis of cervical cancer cell lines. We also asked whether this effect could be observed in vivo. In vitro, both I3C and DIM caused accumulation of DNA strand breaks in three cervical cancer cell lines. Induction of apoptosis was confirmed by nuclear morphology, nucleosome leakage, altered cytoplasmic membrane permeability and caspase 3 activation. Neither I3C nor DIM caused apoptotic changes in normal human keratinocytes. In C33A cervical cancer cells, DIM was more potent than I3C [dose at which the number of viable cells was 50% of that in untreated cultures (LD50) = 50–60 µmol/L for DIM and 200 µmol/L for I3C in a mitochondrial function assay] and faster acting. Furthermore, I3C reduced Bcl-2 protein in a time- and dose-dependent manner. In HPV16-transgenic mice, which develop cervical cancer after chronic estradiol exposure, apoptotic cells were detected in cervical epithelium by TdT-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling staining and by immunohistochemical staining of active caspase 3 only in mice exposed to 17ß-estradiol (E2) and fed I3C. Rare apoptotic cells were also observed by hematoxylin and eosin staining in the spinous layer of the cervical epithelium in both control and transgenic mice. Estradiol reduced the percentage of these late-stage apoptotic cells in the cervical epithelium of transgenic, E2-treated mice, but this reduction was prevented by I3C. These data confirm the proapoptotic action of I3C on transformed cells in vitro, extend the observations to cervical cancer cells and to DIM and show for the first time that dietary I3C results in increased apoptosis in target tissues in vivo.


KEY WORDS: • cervical cancer • indole-3-carbinol • diindolylmethane • apoptosis • mice




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