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Focus on Alternative and Complementary Therapies
Home > FACT > FACT contents > Volume 9 2004 > Volume 9:4 December 2004 > Short Reports > Herbal Medicine

Focus Altern Complement Ther 2004; 9: 320

Herbal Medicine

Ajoene as an anti-leukaemia agent?

Ajoene (4,5,9-trithiadodeca-1,6,11-triene-9-oxide) is a garlic-derived compound produced most efficiently from pure allicin and has the advantage of a greater chemical stability than allicin. Several clinical trials and in vitro studies of ajoene have demonstrated its best-known antithrombosis, antimicrobial and cholesterol-lowering activities. Recently, topical application of ajoene has produced significant clinical response in patients with skin basal cell carcinoma. Ajoene was shown to inhibit proliferation and induce apoptosis of several human leukaemia CD34-negative cells, including HL-60, U937, HEL and OCIM-1. Also, ajoene induces 30% apoptosis in myeloblasts from chronic myeloid leukaemia patient in blast crisis. More significantly, ajoene profoundly enhanced the apoptotic effect of the two chemotherapeutic drugs, cytarabine and fludarabine, in human CD34-positive resistant myeloid leukaemia cells through enhancing their bcl-2 inhibitory and caspase-3 activation activities. The two key anti-leukaemia biological actions of ajoene were the inhibition of proliferation and the induction of apoptosis. Studies have shown the anti-proliferation activity of ajoene to be associated with a block in the G2/M phase of the cell cycle in human myeloid leukaemia cells. The apoptosis-inducing activity of ajoene is via the mitochondria-dependent caspase cascade through a significant reduction of the anti-apoptotic bcl-2 that results in release of cytochrome c and the activation of caspase-3. Since acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) is a heterogeneous malignant disease in which disease progression at the level of CD34-positive cells has a major impact on resistance to chemotherapy and relapse, the inability to undergo apoptosis is a crucial mechanism of multi-drug resistance in AML patients. These recent findings suggest a novel promising role for the treatment of refractory and/or relapsed AML patients as well as elderly AML patients.

Hassan HT. Ajoene (natural garlic compound): a new anti-leukaemia agent for AML therapy. Leuk Res 2004; 28: 667–71. [Abstract]
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