scholarly journals Anti-Cancer Potential of Oxialis obtriangulata in Pancreatic Cancer Cell through Regulation of the ERK/Src/STAT3-Mediated Pathway

Molecules ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (10) ◽  
pp. 2301 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eun-Jin An ◽  
Yumi Kim ◽  
Seung-Hyeon Lee ◽  
Hyun Min Ko ◽  
Won-Seok Chung ◽  
...  

As a plant medicine, Oxalidaceae has been used to treat various diseases in Korea. However, there is little data on the anti-cancer efficacy of Oxalidaceae, particularly O. obtriangulata. This study aimed to investigate the anti-cancer effect of O. obtriangulata methanol extract (OOE) and its regulatory actions on pancreatic carcinoma. OOE showed anti-proliferative effects and induced cell death in the colony formation and cell viability assays, respectively. The Fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) data confirmed that OOE significantly induced cell cycle accumulation at the G2/M phase and apoptotic effects. Additionally, OOE inhibited the activated ERK (extracellular-signal-regulated kinase)/Src (Proto-oncogene tyrosine-protein kinase Src)/STAT3 (signal transducers and activators of transcription 3) pathways including nuclear translocation of STAT3. Furthermore, suppression of Ki67, PARP(Poly ADP-ribose polymerase), caspase-3, P27(Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1B), and c-Myc as well as the STAT3 target genes CDK(cyclin-dependent kinase)1, CDK2, Cyclin B1, VEGF-1(vascular endothelial growth factor-1), MMP-9(Matrix metallopeptidase 9), and Survivin by OOE was observed in BxPC3. We speculate that these molecular actions might support an anti-cancer effect of OOE. In this study, we demonstrated that OOE may be a promising anti-cancer material and may serve as a natural therapy and alternative remedy for pancreatic cancer treatment.

Pathology ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 46 ◽  
pp. S109
Author(s):  
Angela Chou ◽  
Anthony J. Gill ◽  
Jian Kang ◽  
Christine Lee ◽  
Marcelo Sergio ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (17) ◽  
pp. 9243
Author(s):  
Mashan L. Abdullah ◽  
Othman Al-Shabanah ◽  
Zeinab K. Hassan ◽  
Mohamed M. Hafez

The use of natural compounds is promising in approaches to prevent and treat cancer. The long-term application of most currently employed chemotherapy techniques has toxic side effects. Eugenol, a phenolic phytochemical extracted from certain essential oils, has an anti-cancer effect. The modulation of autophagy can promote either the survival or apoptosis of cancer cells. Triple-negative (MDA-MB-231) and HER2 positive (SK-BR-3) breast cancer cell lines were treated with different doses of eugenol. Apoptosis was detected by a flow-cytometry technique, while autophagy was detected by acridine orange. Real-time PCR and Western blot assays were applied to investigate the effect of eugenol on the gene and protein expression levels of autophagy and apoptotic genes. Treating cells with different concentrations of eugenol significantly inhibited cell proliferation. The protein levels of AKT serine/threonine kinase 1 (AKT), forkhead box O3 (FOXO3a), cyclin dependent kinase inhibitor 1A (p21), cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor (p27), and Caspase-3 and -9 increased significantly in Eugenol-treated cells. Eugenol also induced autophagy by upregulating the expression levels of microtubule-associated protein 1 light chain 3 (LC3) and downregulating the expression of nucleoporin 62 (NU p62). Eugenol is a promising natural anti-cancer agent against triple-negative and HER2-positive breast cancer. It appears to work by targeting the caspase pathway and by inducing autophagic cell death.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 1609-1609
Author(s):  
Ralph Waesch ◽  
Dirk Engelbert ◽  
Dominik Schnerch

Abstract Accurate DNA replication and chromosome segregation is essential during cell division in order to provide genomic stability and avoid malignant growth. We found that ubiquitin-dependent proteolytic cell cycle control by the E3-ubiquitin-ligase anaphase-promoting complex (APC) activated by Cdh1 (APC-Cdh1) is required for maintaining genomic integrity and viability in proliferating human cells. Lentiviral-delivered stable expression of short hairpins targeted against Cdh1 causes an apoptotic phenotype associated with p53-stabilization and p53-dependent transcriptional up-regulation of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21. Cdh1-depleted cells enter mitosis delayed compared to controls suggesting the activation of a DNA-damage checkpoint in S- and G2-phase. Depletion of Cdh1 leads to premature accumulation of cyclin A2 and cyclin B1 in G1- and S-phase. This may interfere with loading of pre-replication-complexes onto origins of replication in G1 and cause chromosomal instability when cells progress into mitosis. In addition, stabilization of the Cdh1 target Aurora A at physiological levels is sufficient to cause centrosome overduplication and subsequent polyploidization in Cdh1 and p53 deficient cells. Genetic instability is a hallmark of cancer cells and deregulation of APC-Cdh1 may be involved, since we observe downregulation of Cdh1 in t(8;21) acute myeloid leukemia. Moreover, expression of AML1/ETO in an inducible system leads to downregulation of Cdh1 indicating transcriptional repression of Cdh1 by AML1/ETO. Consistent with these data AML1/ETO positive cell lines show numerical chromosomal aberrations. Thus, disruption of the central mitotic control machinery leads to genetic instability by several mechanisms and the APC may be an important suppressor of tumor progression in AML1/ETO positive leukemia.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 686-686
Author(s):  
Kim L. Rice ◽  
Itsaso Hormaeche ◽  
Melanie J. McConnell ◽  
Sergei Doulatov ◽  
Jared Flatow ◽  
...  

Abstract The t(11;17)(q23;q21) translocation is associated with a retinoic acid-insensitive form of acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) involving the production of reciprocal fusion proteins PLZF-RARα and RARα-PLZF. These proteins mediate malignant transformation by binding to and dysregulating RARα/RXR and PLZF target genes, respectively. In order to investigate the molecular basis of PLZF-RARα induced leukemia, we performed a genome wide screen for PLZF-RARα direct target genes using a gain of function model in which PLZF-RARα was expressed in human U937 leukemia cells. Chromatin from U937/PLZF-RARα cells was immunoprecipitated using PLZF antibodies, amplified by ligation-mediated PCR and biological triplicates were hybridized to NimbleGen 2.7kB promoter arrays, which represent 24,659 human promoters. We identified 4916 genes directly bound by PLZF-RARα (2/3 biological replicates, FDR <0.2). These genes were highly enriched for ontological categories including immunity and defense (p<10-6), apoptosis (p<2×10-5), cell cycle (p<10-3) and oncogenesis (p<10-2). Gene expression profiling of U937/PLZF-RARα cells revealed that 34% of direct targets were also transcriptionally regulated in response to PLZF-RARα induction. Despite the established role of PLZF-RARα as a transcriptional repressor, 56% of genes bound by PLZF-RARα were upregulated and 44% repressed. Bioinformatic analysis of PLZF-RARα bound sequences using the MATRIXReduce algorithm identified the ‘-AGGTCA-‘ core sequence as the highest ranked position specific affinity matrix (PSAM). Comparison of this matrix with known transcription factor binding sites from the JASPAR core database revealed high similarity to the recognition sequence for the RAR-related orphan receptor A1 (RORA1) (E value: 5.2×10-3), RORA2 (3.5×10-2) and RXRA-VDR (4.4×10-2). This suggests that the natural binding site of PLZF-RARα is similar to that of other nuclear receptors. The ‘GTCA’ core sequence is frequently observed in canonical retinoic acid receptor response elements and this motif was only associated with genes repressed with binding by PLZF-RARα. Together these results are consistent with the idea that PLZF-RARα acts in large part as a dominant negative retinoic acid receptor. A comparison of genes bound directly by PLZF-RARα with gene expression profiles from 22 APL (4 PLZF-RARα, 18 PML-RARα) and 99 acute myeloid leukemias (AML) selected at random from the Erasmus University dataset, using gene set enrichment analysis, revealed that direct targets of PLZF-RARα were differentially repressed in APL when compared to other forms of AML. Overexpression of PLZF-RARα in murine hematopoietic progenitors and human CD34+ cord blood, blocked myeloid differentiation, an effect associated with the repression of C/EBP genes (α, β and ε), which were identified as direct targets of PLZF-RARα by ChIP-chip. Treatment of primary CD34+ cells with ATRA led to an increase in CEBPα and β, but repression of CEBPε was not relieved. Overexpression of PLZF-RARα in primary murine bone marrow led to an increase in the more primitive Sca1+ population, coincident with increased serial replating ability. Overexpression of PLZF-RARα in mouse and human progenitors led to increased proliferation with more cells in the S and G2/M phases of cell cycle. Correlating with this effect, genes with defined roles in hematopoietic stem cell self-renewal including HOXA9 and MPL were bound and activated by the induction of PLZF-RARα in U937 cells. Increased proliferation was also coincident with repressed expression of Cdkn2d (p19) a cyclin dependent kinase inhibitor, also directly bound by PLZF-RARα. PLZF-RARα appears to transform cells through three interlinked modes of action, inhibition of differentiation by direct repression of key myeloid transcription factors, stimulation of proliferation by repression of a cyclin dependent kinase inhibitor and activation of genes critical for self renewal.


2002 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 247-256 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hana Kovarova ◽  
Petr Halada ◽  
Petr Man ◽  
Petr Dzubak ◽  
Marian Hajduch

The purpose of this study was to use the proteomics approach, which is based on high resolution two-dimensional electrophoresis coupled with multivariate correspondence analysis and mass spectrometry, to classify objectively the biochemical basis of the anti-cancer activity of the synthetic cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, bohemine (BOH). The changes in the cell cycle and corresponding protein composition of the A549 human lung adenocarcinoma cell line after treatment with BOH were evaluated and proteins differentially expressed in the BOH treated A549 cells, compared to the untreated A549 counterparts, were selected. Thirteen of these candidate proteins associated with the drug effects in vitro were identified by mass spectrometry. Many of these proteins fall into one of three functional categories: i) metabolic pathways (glycolysis, nucleic acid synthesis and NADPH production), ii) stress response and protein folding, and iii) cytoskeleton and exocytosis. Changes in protein expression patterns corresponded to a higher resistance of A549 lung carcinoma cells to BOH when compared to the CEM leukaemia cell line. These protein changes reflect a fine balance of the resistant versus the susceptible phenotype in response to the drug. Since BOH is a selective cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, changes in the protein expression pattern can be more generally associated with cell cycle regulation as evidenced by inhibition of cell cycling in A549 cells. Our conclusions further underline the importance of cell cycle control in both the cellular signalling and metabolic pathways.


2011 ◽  
Vol 12 (7) ◽  
pp. 598-609 ◽  
Author(s):  
Georg Feldmann ◽  
Anjali Mishra ◽  
Savita Bisht ◽  
Collins Karikari ◽  
Ignacio Garrido-Laguna ◽  
...  

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