Abstract
Melatonin exerts a multitude of physiological functions including the regulation of the sleep cycle and circadian rhythm. Although the synthesis of melatonin in the pineal gland is regulated by changes in the light/dark cycle, the release of melatonin in the gastrointestinal tract is related to food consumption. Melatonin regulates antioxidative processes and it improves T-helper cell response by stimulating the production of specific cytokines. Melatonin is directly involved in preventing tumor initiation, promotion, and progression in a variety of cancers of the gastrointestinal tract including colorectal cancer, cholangiocarcinoma, hepatocarcinoma, and pancreatic carcinoma. This paper is a review of the literature regarding melatonin in the gastrointestinal tract and as a potential therapy for gastrointestinal cancers.
Keywords: Gastrointestinal cancer, melatonin, T-helper cell, colorectal cancer, cholangiocarcinoma, hepatocarcinoma, pancreatic cancer
Melatonin
Melatonin is a natural compound with a multitude of physiological functions such as the regulation of the sleep cycle and the circadian rhythm (1,2). The primary sites of melatonin synthesis and secretion are the pineal gland as well as the gastrointestinal tract (e.g., small intestine and liver), the retinal pigment epithelium, lymphocytes and melanocytes in the skin (3-8). Although melatonin synthesis in the pineal gland is inhibited by exposure to light and activated during darkness, the release of melatonin in the gastrointestinal tract seems to be also dependent on food consumption (9,10). In some animal species, the levels of melatonin in the gastrointestinal tract exceed the blood levels by 10-100 times (11). In addition, the gastrointestinal tract contributes to the changes in melatonin concentration found in the peripheral blood (11,12). Melatonin affects the function of numerous cells and can be detected in membrane, cytoplasmic, nuclear, and mitochondrial compartments of several cell types (13). Also, melatonin plays important roles in anti-oxidative processes, and it has been shown to have immune-enhancing properties. Indeed, melatonin exerts its function by both autocrine and paracrine mechanisms, thus affecting the function of lymphatic tissues of the immune system, the gastrointestinal epithelia, and the smooth muscles of the digestive system (14). Also, melatonin improves T-helper cell response by the production of specific cytokines including interleukin-2 (IL-2), interleukin-6 (IL-6) interleukin-10 (IL-10), interleukin-12 (IL-12), and interferon-y (IFN-y) (15). T-Helper cells play a crucial role in the protection against malignancy. Indeed, studies have shown that melatonin prevents tumor initiation, promotion, and progression in a variety of tumors such melanoma, breast, prostate, ovarian, hepatocellular, biliary and colorectal cancer (16-25).
Gastrointestinal cancers
Pancreatic cancer is the third most common malignancy and the fifth foremost cause of cancer-associated death among gastrointestinal cancers (26-29). Pancreatic tumors are often resistant to chemotherapy and radiotherapy and resistant to apoptosis (30,31). Approximately, 80-95% of these tumors have mutations in the KRAS2 gene, and 85-98% of these tumors show mutations, deletions, or hypermethylation in the CDKN2 gene (26,32-34).
Though the incidence of gastric cancer is decreasing steadily around the world, it still remains a serious health problem since is the second most common type of fatal cancer (35-37). Extensive studies of potential therapeutic actions for gastric cancer have made progress, but the chance of success for patients with advanced gastric cancer is not favorable.
Colorectal cancer is one of the leading types of cancers of the gastrointestinal tract (38,39), and its prevalence has been predicted to increase significantly by the year 2020 (40). It has been estimated to increase from approximately 0.36% to 0.46% between 2000 and 2020 (40). Furthermore, it has been suggested that colorectal cancer prevalence will increase much more rapidly than the population in the United States (40).
Hepatocellular carcinoma is the fifth most common strain of cancer in the world with more that half a million of new cases every year (41-44). It has become a very serious health problem around the world because of its relation to infection with both hepatitis B and C viruses (45-47). Liver transplantation and chemotherapy are crucial therapeutic strategies utilized in the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma.
Gastrointestinal cancer has taken precedence in oncological research seeking to improve therapeutic treatments, and recently, a major approach to this field has been to examine the role of melatonin in the tumorigenesis of gastrointestinal cancers.
Melatonin biosynthesis
Melatonin is synthesized in the pineal gland, and released into the serum in a circadian pattern, corresponding to light and dark cycles (4). After leaving the pineal gland, melatonin enters the blood stream as an endocrine compound, and regulates biological rhythms such as the sleep-wake cycle. Recent studies have shown that melatonin is synthesized in a number of tissues/organs including in the eye, lymphocytes, mast cells and the gastrointestinal tract (3-7). Melatonin released by these peripheral tissues is not released into the blood in excessive amounts (as opposed to the amount produced in the pineal gland) but rather it acts locally as an autocrine and/or paracrine signals (48,49). The exposure to light and/or dark, which regulates the release of melatonin by the pineal gland, is received in the suprachiasmatic nuclei via retinal photosensitive ganglionic cells (13). Superior cervical ganglion (SCG) postganglionic neurons produce fibers that stimulate the pineal gland and release norepinephrine, thus regulating melatonin synthesis. Norepinephrine released during the night binds to β-adrenergic receptors on pinealocytes, thus activating adenylyl cyclase/cAMP signaling that stimulates the synthesis of melatonin (50,51). During the daytime, the suprachiasmatic nucleus (which regulates the circadian oscillation in the brain) inhibits the release of norepinephrine, suppressing the production of melatonin (52).
Melatonin synthesis starts from the amino acid tryptophan, which is then converted into 5-hydroxytryptophan. At that point, it becomes serotonin, which is then acetylated to form N-acetylserotonin. This process happens by the action of the enzyme, arylalkylamine-N-acetyltransferase. The acetylated serotonin is then converted into melatonin by hydroxyindole- O-methyltransferase, which is the rate-determining enzyme (slow-step) in the synthesis of melatonin (53).
Production of melatonin appears to decline gradually with aging as elderly individuals have been shown to have low levels of melatonin (54,55). However, it is possible that other factors besides aging regulate the change in melatonin levels in elderly people (54). Other factors associated with age such as chronic diseases, depressed mood, physical disabilities, poor perceived health may contribute to sleep disturbances that would affect the circadian rhythm of older people contributing to the reduction in melatonin levels (54).
Melatonin in the lower gut
Melatonin levels in the gastrointestinal tract are unrelated to melatonin levels synthesized in the pineal gland. These proposed findings are supported by the fact that pinealectomy in rats have no influence on the levels of melatonin in the gastrointestinal tract (56). Also, the concentrations of melatonin in the gastrointestinal tract decrease with aging. Indeed, studies have shown that the melatonin levels in the mucosa of the ileum and distal colon are higher in older compared to younger mice (57). Circulating melatonin during the daytime may originate from the gastrointestinal tract (57). These variations in melatonin levels also suggest that melatonin regulates the digestion and control of food consumption.
Even though several animal studies show protective effects of melatonin in colitis models, the therapeutic role of melatonin in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is still unclear (13). Several research groups have tested the effects of the self-administration of melatonin in IBD. It has been presented that the self-administered use of melatonin as a self-directed treatment for jet lag on international flights, the patient observed that his ulcerative colitis (UC) symptoms were virtually absent (58,59). Meanwhile, other studies showed melatonin exacerbated symptoms associated with UC or Crohn’s disease (60,61). Further studies, especially clinical trials should be performed to evaluate a possible beneficial or detrimental effect of melatonin in IBD despite those basic researches strongly suggest beneficial effects.
Melatonin metabolism
Melatonin is primarily metabolized in the liver, where it is hydroxylated in the sixth carbon position by cytochrome P450 mono-oxygenases. Then, it is conjugated to sulfate and released as 6-sulfatoxymelatonin (62).
Melatonin is metabolized in all cells without the use of enzymes, and it can also be metabolized extracellularly with oxidants and free radicals. Through these steps melatonin is converted into cyclic-3-hydroxy melatonin when it acquires two hydroxyl radicals. This process is referred to as the kynurenine pathway of melatonin metabolism, in which enzymatic reactions, pseudo enzymatic reaction involving oxoferryl-hemoglobin, photo catalytic reactions, reactions with oxygen free radicals, and ozonolysis take place. During the conversion process of melatonin to N1-acetyl-N2-formyl-5-methoxykynuramine (AFMK) as many as four radicals can be consumed. It has been suggested that AFMK is the primary metabolite of melatonin (63).
Melatonin receptors
Some of the effects of melatonin depend on the activation of membrane receptors, which are also expressed in the gastrointestinal tract including the ileum, colon and the liver (13,16,64,65). These receptors are named melatonin-1 receptor (MT1), MT2, and MT3. MT1 and MT2 are part of the G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR) family, and they share a common seven-transmembrane structure. These two receptors activate distinct intracellular signaling pathways, some of which mediate adenylate cyclase inhibition (64) and phospholipase C beta activation (66,67). The MT2 receptor couples to several signaling pathways including phosphoinositol production, the inhibition of guanylate cyclase pathway as well as the inhibition of adenylate cyclase. MT3, on the other hand, binds to the enzyme, quinonereductase 2 (QR2). Activation of this enzymesubstrate complex by melatonin suggests that melatonin protect against oxidative stress due to its antioxidative properties (13).
In a study performed in rat pancreas, stomach, colon, and duodenum, MT2 immunoreactivity was found in the muscularis mucosae and the circular and longitudinal muscle layers of the gastrointestinal tract (68). These findings suggest that the MT2 receptors may regulate intestinal motility. Melatonin receptors may also mediate the effects of melatonin on the efficacy of the immune system.
Melatonin and the immune system
Melatonin can also increase natural killer cell activity and Th2 cell-mediated immune responses (69,70). Also, melatonin has been shown to protect human and murine CD4+ T cells from apoptosis by inhibiting CD95 ligand mRNA and protein up-regulation in response to TCR/CD3 stimulation (71). Melatonin affects T cell tolerance by a IL-2-dependent pathway, but the vast majority of the effects of melatonin on lymphocyte function is mediated by MT1 receptors (72).
Increased numbers of CD4+ CD25+ regulatory T cells (Tregs) have been demonstrated in the tumor of patients and animal models with gastric cancer. A recent has evaluated the role of Tregs in melatonin inhibition of gastric cancer growth both in vivo and in vitro (73). This study has also shown that melatonin decreased the number of Tregs and Forkhead box p3 (Foxp3) expression in tumor tissue. The study suggested that melatonin inhibition of gastric cancer could be due to down-regulation of CD4+ CD25+ Tregs and Foxp3 expression in tumor tissue (73).
Melatonin and colorectal cancer
A recent study has demonstrated the presence of melatonin binding sites in the mucosa and the submucosa of the human colon (74). Specifically, in this study it was demonstrated (by radioimmunoassay) that melatonin concentration in control patient tissues was 467±99 pg/g, whereas daytime melatonin levels in colorectal cancer patients were 3,147±87.8 pg/g tissue (74).
It was also found that increased colonic crypt cell proliferation had occurred in rats, indicating that melatonin pathways were involved in tumorigenesis in the colon (75). Another study suggested that small bowel crypt cell hyperplasia occurred after the pinealectomy, but the mechanism by which this occurred was not evaluated (13). In a recent study, it has been shown that melatonin regulates preneoplastic patterns caused by constant light exposure in the colon (76). The proposed mechanism by which melatonin controls colon cancer involves the inhibition of tumor angiogenesis, maintenance of the intracellular level of glutathione, and modulation of mitotic and apoptotic processes.
Other factors affecting tumor development in relation to melatonin include the modulation of estrogen receptors, regulation of cell cycle, expression of growth factors and antioxidants, and increased gap junctions (77,78). Melatonin has also been shown to alter the oxidative properties and to reduce the rate of production of nitric oxide in cultured colon cancer cells (79). The clinical trials that have been conducted using melatonin in relation to colorectal cancer are few and not of great quality. These studies have not yielded data to confirm the efficacy of melatonin for colorectal cancer. Controlled clinical trials are still needed in order to establish melatonin’s role in cancer treatment more concretely.
Melatonin in hepatocellular carcinoma and cholangiocarcinoma
A recent study has demonstrated that melatonin inhibits the growth of rat hepatoma 7288CTC cells by a receptormediated inhibition of tumor linoleic acid uptake and its metabolism to 13-hydroxyoctadecadienoic acid (13-HODE), which is the mitogenic signal for linoleic acid-dependent tumor growth (80). Melatonin inhibition of the growth of the growth of rat hepatoma 7288CTC cells was also associated with reduced cAMP levels, and phosphorylation of ERK 1/2 (80).
In a recent study which was intended to observe and evaluate the effects of anticarcinogenic functions of melatonin, N-nitrosodiethylamine (NDEA), which is a carcinogen that induces liver cancer, was used to inject Wistar male rats (81). This was followed by weekly injections of carbon tetrachloride or vehicle for six weeks. Melatonin or its vehicle was administered two hours before lights out on a daily basis for 20 weeks. After dissection, the results showed that the NDEA had stunted body weight gain and produced sizable liver tumors (81). In addition, NDEA increased levels of alanine transaminase, plasma aspartate transaminase, and α-fetoprotein. Administration of melatonin proved to have significantly hindered tumor development, presumably by way of its antioxidant effects, both direct and indirect.
In a clinical trial with 35 patients having advanced tumors of the digestive tract, a treatment regimen utilizing low-dose IL-2 and melatonin was tested (82). Fourteen patients had colorectal cancer, eight had gastric cancer, six had hepatic carcinoma, and seven had pancreatic adenocarcinoma. Complete response was achieved in two of the patients, one of which had gastric cancer and the other hepatic carcinoma. An additional six patients showed tumor regression.
In another study, patients with advanced primary hepatocellular carcinoma were treated with transcatheter arterial chemoembolization (TACE) alone, or simultaneously with melatonin (83). The efficacy of the TACE alone was 16 percent, whereas the efficacy of TACE with melatonin was 28 percent. The survival rate of half, one, and two years in the TACE group was 82 percent, 54 percent, and 26 percent (83). The survival rate of the TACE and melatonin group was 100 percent, 68 percent, and 40 percent (83).
Cholangiocarcinoma is a cancer that arises from the malignant transformation of bile duct epithelial cells (i.e., cholangiocytes) (84-86). The occurrence of cholangiocarcinoma has been on the rise for the past decades (87-89). Cholangiocarcinoma is often antisymptomatic until it reaches an advanced stage in its development, in which it becomes characterized by obstructive symptoms (89). Cholangiocarcinoma is resistant to conventional forms of chemotherapy, with surgical resection being the only effective therapy (89). We have recently shown that the enzymes [serotonin N-acetyltransferase or (AANAT), and acetylserotonin O-methyltransferase (ASMT)] regulating melatonin synthesis as well melatonin secretion are downregulated in cholangiocarcinoma lines and human biopsy samples compared to normal controls (16). Conversely, the expression of the melatonin receptors, MT1 and MT2, increased in CCA lines and biopsy samples compared to controls (16). Also, melatonin decreased the growth of human cholangiocarcinoma lines implanted into nude mice by increased AANAT, ASMT expression and melatonin synthesis and decreased MT1/MT2 expression (16) (Figure 1A,B). We also observed increased necrosis in sections from melatonintreated mice compared with control mice (Figure 1A,B). There was a decrease in cholangiocarcinoma proliferation (by proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA)) and an increase in biliary apoptosis (by cleaved caspase-3) in tumor sections from melatonin-treated mice compared to control mice (Figure 1A,B). Overexpression of AANAT was also shown to inhibit cholangiocarcinoma growth (16). We concluded that there is dysregulation of the AANAT/ASMT/melatoninmelatonin receptor axis in cholangiocarcinoma that decreased melatonin secretion, thus enhancing cholangiocarcinoma growth.
Figure 1.
34 days after melatonin administration, there was a decrease in tumor size in nude mice treated with melatonin compared to controls. Representative pictures of the tumors from both groups of mice, and a summary graph of each data point are shown. A.Data are mean ± SEM of tumor size evaluations from four mice per each group. *P<0.05 vs. the corresponding values of tumor volume of control mice. B. There was increased necrosis in sections from melatonin-treated mice compared to control mice. There was decreased cholangiocarcinoma proliferation (by PCNA) and increased biliary apoptosis (by cleaved caspase-3) in tumor sections from melatonin-treated mice compared to controls. There was increased in the expression of AANAT, ASMT, melatonin and a decrease in MT1/MT2 expression in nude mice treated with melatonin compared to controls. Orig. magn., ×125. Data are mean ± SEM. *P<0.05 vs. the corresponding values of tumor volume of nude mice treated with vehicle. Reproduced with permission from ref. (9)
Melatonin as an adjuvant therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma
One previous study examined the cytostatic efficiency of doxorubicin applied together with melatonin to rats with transplantable Morris hepatoma (90). It was demonstrated that administration of melatonin together with doxorubicin decreased the extent of tumour necrosis and the apoptotic tumour cells but, on the other hand, decreased the number of apoptotic cardiomyocytes. Therefore, melatonin weakens the cytotoxic activity of doxorubicin by the decreased proportions of necrotic and apoptotic cells of transplantable Morris hepatoma. Melatonin protects also cardiomyocytes by decreasing doxorubicin-induced apoptosis in the cells.
In a recent study aimed to evaluate the growthinhibiting and apoptosis-inducing effects of melatonin alone or in combination with chemotherapeutic drugs (e.g., Doxorubicin), melatonin was shown to inhibit the growth of HepG2 and Bel-7402 cells in a dose-dependent manner (91). The combination of the two treatments increased the inhibitory effect and induction of hepatocyte apoptosis compared to the individual treatments. In summary, melatonin and Doxorubicin synergistically affect the growth of the human hepatoma cell lines, HepG2 and Bel-7402 by down-regulation of Bcl-2 and up-regulation of Bax (91).
Melatonin in pancreatic carcinoma cells
Heat shock proteins are chaperones that regulate protein folding and degradation. Recent studies suggest that heat shock protein 27 (HSP27) regulate the promotion of tumor growth and the development of resistance to chemotherapy and radiotherapy (92).
In this contest, a recent study has shown that melatonin affects HSP27 protein expression in human pancreatic carcinoma cells (PANC-1) (93). Specifically, treatment with melatonin increased not only the cytoplasmic protein level, but also the nuclear phosphorylated HSP27 protein level in the PANC-1 cells in comparison to control cells. The authors suggested that melatonin stimulates the production and phosphorylation of HSP27 in PANC-1 and possibly inhibits apoptosis in these cells.
Conclusions
The antiproliferative and immunomodulatory effects of melatonin have been demonstrated in a multitude of cancers including those of the gastrointestinal tract. Melatonin has shown some success in the treatment of advanced hepatocellular carcinoma in combination with doxorubicin, through the inducement of cellular apoptosis, and the inhibition of cell proliferation (Figure 2). At the same time, melatonin has been shown to successfully enhance the immunomodulatory effects of IL-2 therapy (Figure 2). In cholangiocarcinoma, melatonin inhibited carcinogenesis in vivo and in vitro by both autocrine/paracrine mechanisms. The antioxidative effects of melatonin have been shown through further observation of melatonin receptors in the inhibition of several signaling pathways in colorectal and liver cancer. In summary, recent developments in the role and pathology of melatonin in cancers of the gastrointestinal tract have contributed to the improvement of therapeutic treatments for these cancers. The autocrine/paracrine modulation (e.g., by specific agonists/antagonists and/or exposure to dark/light) of melatonin synthesis by changes in the enzymes (AANAT and ASMT) regulating the synthesis of this chemical may be an important therapeutic tool for the management of a number of cancers.
Figure 2.
Mechanisms for melatonin in the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma. Right side. Melatonin has adjuvant properties to chemotherapies, and has been demonstrated to sensitize hepatocellular carcinoma cells to apoptosis by doxorubicin; Left side. Melatonin has immunomodulatory properties, which enhance lymphocyte infiltration, and anti-tumor activity
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Dr. Nicholas C. Hightower Centennial Chair of Gastroenterology from Scott & White Hospital, a VA Research Career Scientist Award, and the NIH grants DK58411 and DK062975 to both Drs. Alpini and Glaser and the NIH grant DK081442 to Dr. Glaser.
Footnotes
Disclosure: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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