The tropical shrub, Rauwolfia vomitoria, is a medicinal plant used traditionally to treat a variety of ailments. A bioactive
beta-carboline alkaloid,
alstonine, present in this extract was previously shown to have anti-
cancer activity against
cancer cell lines. This study considers the potential anti-
prostate cancer activity of this extract in vitro and in vivo. Rauwolfia vomitoria extract standardized for
beta-carboline alkaloids was tested for ability to influence the growth and survival of the human LNCaP
prostate cancer cell line. A WST-1 assay was used to measure cell growth, and cell cycle analyses were conducted with flow cytometry. Western blot detection of PARP cleavage and accumulation of cells containing sub-genomic
DNA indicated induction of apoptosis. Pathway specific microarray analyses were utilized to identify the effect of Rauwolfia extract on the expression of 225 genes. Mice xenografted with LNCaP cells were treated with the extract or placebo control, and
tumor growth was measured for 5 weeks. The effects of the extract on xenografted
tumor cell proliferation and apoptosis were measured by in situ
BrdU incorporation and TUNEL staining. Rauwolfia extract decreased in vitro cell growth in a dose-dependent manner (p<0.001) and induced the accumulation of G1 phase cells. PARP cleavage demonstrated that apoptosis was induced only at the highest concentration tested (500 microg/ml) which was confirmed by detection of cells containing sub-genomic
DNA. The expression of genes associated with DNA damage signaling pathway was up-regulated by Rauwolfia treatment, including that of GADD153 and MDG. The expression of a few cell cycle genes (p21,
cyclin D1 and E2F1) was also modulated. These alterations were confirmed by RT-PCR.
Tumor volumes were decreased by 60%, 70% and 58% in the groups fed the 75, 37.5 or 7.5 mg/kg Rauwolfia, respectively (Kruskal-Wallis test, p<0.001). The Rauwolfia vomitoria extract significantly suppressed the growth and cell cycle progression of LNCaP cells, in vitro and in vivo.