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Delving KS-01 as a novel therapeutic strategy in treating breast cancer
Joint Event on 15th International Congress on American Pathology and Oncology Research & International Conference on Microbial Genetics and Molecular Microbiology
Cancer cells have an increased need for cholesterol, which is required for cell membrane integrity. Cholesterol accumulation has
been described in various malignancies including breast cancer. Cholesterol has also been known to be the precursor of estrogen
and vitamin D, both of which play a key role in the histology of breast cancer. Thus, depleting the cholesterol levels in cancer cells is
a proposed innovative strategy to treat cancer. Therefore, novel cholesterol-depleting compounds are currently being investigated.
KS-01 is a cyclic amylose oligomer composed of glucose units. It solubilizes the cholesterol and is proven to be toxicologically benign
in humans. This led us to hypothesize that it might deplete cholesterol from cancer cells and may prove to be a clinically useful
compound. Our work provides preliminary experimental evidences to support this hypothesis. We identified the potency of KS-01
in vitro against two breast cancer cell lines: MCF-7 (Estrogen positive, ER+), MDA-MB-231 (Estrogen negative, ER-) and compared
the results against two normal cell lines: MRC-5 (Normal Human Lung Fibroblasts) and HEK-293 (Normal human embryonic
kidney cells) using cytotoxic, apoptosis and cholesterol based assays. KS-01 treatment reduced intracellular cholesterol resulting in
significant breast cancer cell growth inhibition through apoptosis. The results hold true for both ER+ and ER-. These data suggest that
KS-01 can prevent cholesterol accumulation in breast cancer cells and is a promising new anticancer agent.