Inhibition of human head and neck squamous cell cancer growth by modulation of heat shock proteins and induction of the mitochondrial apoptotic pathway with withaferin A

2009 ◽  
Vol 27 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e17003-e17003
Author(s):  
M. S. Cohen ◽  
B. N. Timmermann ◽  
G. O'Donnell ◽  
A. K. Samadi

e17003 Background: Epithelial cancers, particularly lung cancer and head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), continue to pose formidable challenges in clinical practice. Novel chemotherapeutic agents have been developed, but even those have limited long-term benefits in the treatment of these tumors, illustrating the need to continue to improve systemic therapy for affected patients. The objective of the present study was to investigate the effect of withaferin A (WA), a plant-derived small molecule, on cancer cell growth, heat shock protein expression and induction of apoptosis in human HNSCCs. Methods: MDA1986 and JMAR HNSCC cells were used in all experiments. The effect of WA on cell viability was determined by MTS assay. Apoptosis and mitochondrial membrane potential changes were assessed by annexin V/propidium iodide and JC-1 staining respectively using standard flow cytometry methods. Effect of WA on modulation of heat shock proteins was determined by Western blot analysis. Results: Withaferin A reduces cell viability in both MDA1986 and JMAR cells with IC50 levels of 265 ± 5 nM by MTS assay, which is 5 fold higher than its reported activity in breast cancer cells. WA completely down-regulates HSP90beta, GRP94, and TRAP-1 expression at 250 nM concentration in HNSCC cells at 24 hours treatment. In addition, WA markedly increased HSP70 levels and mildly increased HSP27 levels in a dose-dependent manner at 24 hours treatment. Flow cytometry with Annexin V/PI staining shows that 5 μM WA treatment for 24 hours induced apoptosis in 63% of MDA1986 and 60% of JMAR cells. WA at 5 μM also reduced mitochondrial membrane potential by JC-1 staining with flow cytometry to less than 10% of controls in both JMAR and MDA1986 cells at 24 hours treatment. Conclusions: Withaferin A is a potent novel inhibitor of HSP90 in human HNSCCs. In addition to HSP modulation, its anticancer mechanistic effects involve apoptotic cell death through the mitochondrial pathway. This molecule shows promise for further in vivo studies to establish preclinical proof of concept as a novel anticancer therapy in this disease. No significant financial relationships to disclose.

2010 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 333 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. F. Paula-Lopes ◽  
C. M. Mendes ◽  
P. H. B. Risolia ◽  
J. S. A. Gonçalves ◽  
W. B. Feitosa ◽  
...  

Heat-stress induced maternal hyperthermia has been shown to compromise the series of events associated with oocyte growth and maturation reducing oocyte competence. Such events are regulated by a variety of growth factors and dynamic communication between the oocyte and its surrounding cumulus cells. The objective of the current study was to evaluate the modulatory effects of COCs quality and IGF-I on mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP) and apoptosis in cumulus cells induced by heat shock. In this study high (≥3 layers of compact cumulus cells and homogeneous cytoplasm) and low-grade COCs (<3 layers of less compact cumulus cells and irregular cytoplasm) derived from slaughterhouse ovaries were exposed to control (CTR: 39°C) or heat shock (HS: 41°C) treatments in the presence of 0 or 100 ng mL-1 IGF-I during the first 12 h of in vitro maturation (12 h-IVM). Immediately after 12 h-IVM COCs were denuded by repeated pipetting and cumulus cells evaluated for MMP (MitoProbe JC-1 assay kit. JC-1 is a cationic dye that exhibits potential-depend accumulation in the mitochondria) and apoptosis (Annexin V-FITC and propidium iodide) by flow cytometry (Guava EasyCyte Mini Flow Cytometry System, Millipore, Billerica, MA, USA). This factorial experiment was replicated 4 times using 75-100 COCs per treatment. Data were subjected to three-way analysis of variance using the General Linear Models procedure of SAS. Results are shown in Table 1. Exposure of high and low-grade COCs to HS reduced (P < 0.01) the percentage of cumulus cells carrying high MMP regardless of IGF-I. Even though HS caused cumulus cells mitochondrial membrane depolarization there was neither temperature nor COCs quality effect on cumulus cells apoptosis as indicated by the lack of phosphatidylserine (PS) translocation from the inner to the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane. On the other hand, addition of IGF-I to maturation medium reduced (P < 0.05) the percentage of cumulus cells labeled with Annexin V + PI regardless of COCs quality or temperature. There was no statistical interaction between COCs quality × IGF-I × temperature. In conclusion, exposure of COCs to HS during 12 h-IVM caused cumulus cells mitochondrial depolarization without inducing apoptosis. It is possible that a period longer than 12 h is required for most PS translocation to occur in cumulus cells. Moreover, IGF-I exerted protective effect reducing cumulus cells late apoptosis/necrosis events. Table 1.Effect of heat-shock and IGF-I on cumulus cells mitochondrial membrane potential and apoptosis. Results are least-squares means ± SEM.


1984 ◽  
Vol 98 (1) ◽  
pp. 82 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dennis H. J. Schamhart ◽  
Hendrika S. van Walraven ◽  
Frederik A. C. Wiegant ◽  
Wilbert A. M. Linnemans ◽  
Johannes van Rijn ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 5897-5897 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ipek Durusu ◽  
Hazal Hepsen Husnugil ◽  
Heval Atas ◽  
Aysenur Biber ◽  
Selin Gerekci ◽  
...  

Abstract Multiple myeloma (MM) is a malignant neoplasm of bone marrow plasma B cells with high morbidity. Clofazimine (CLF) is an FDA-approved leprostatic, anti-tuberculosis, and anti-inflammatory drug that was previously shown to have growth suppression effects on various cancer types such as hepatocellular, lung, cervix, esophageal, colon, and breast cancers as well as melanoma, neuroblastoma, and leukemia cells. The objective of this study was to evaluate the anticancer effect of CLF on U266 resistant MM cell line. The relative cell viability of a panel of hematological cell lines (Jurkat, U266, Namalwa, K562, HL60) treated with 10 µM CLF after 24 h of treatment significantly reduced the viability in all cell lines, with percentages ranging between 28% (U266) and 38% (Jurkat) (p<0.001). IC50 value of CLF was found as 9.8 ± 0.7 µM on the U266 cell line. Previous studies showed that this level of CLF does not inhibit growth of healthy cells, which supports safety of CLF. CLF had both dose (2, 5, 10 µM) and time (12, 24, and 48 h) dependent growth inhibitory effect. Combination chemotherapy is an approach to increase the effectiveness of chemotherapeutics as well as overcome drug resistance and suppresses side effects of drugs. Therefore, we evaluate the combination effect of CLF in U266 cells and showed that combination with cisplatin led to a synergistic interaction between two compounds in all tested dose regimes, resulting in a 2.5-7.1 fold marked increase in cell death. Importantly this synergism was observed in U266 cells, which have mutant p53 at A161T showing resistance to cytotoxic agents such as platinum analogs (cisplatin etc.). <>Depolarization of the mitochondrial membrane is one of the first events in apoptosis. JC-1 is a lipophilic and cationic dye that reversibly changes color from green to red as the mitochondrial membrane potential increases (depolarization). JC-1 assay used in both flow cytometry analyses and fluorescence microscopy images have shown that relative to the control, CLF treatment results in the depolarization of mitochondrial membrane 15, 20.5, 14.3 fold respectively at 12, 24, and 48 h in U266 cell line (Figure 1). The caspase family of cysteine proteases plays an important role in apoptosis. Caspase-3 is a major protease activated during the early stages of programmed cell death. 10 µM CLF was applied for 12, 24, and 48 h and anti-active caspase-3 PE stained U266 cells were analyzed by flow cytometry. Caspase-3 activity is enhanced 5.6, 24.5 and 13.6-fold relative to untreated controls at 12h, 24h and 48 h respectively. Phosphatidylserine (PS) translocation to the outer leaflet of the cellular membrane is one of the key steps in early stages of apoptosis. To support our previous findings on apoptotic effect of CLF, we employed Annexin-V assay. CLF treatment caused a significant increase in the percentage of early and late apoptotic cells at 12 h (2.1 and 1.8 fold respectively), 24 h (4.1 and 12.3 fold) and 48 h (10.1 and 11.5 fold). Fluorescence microscopy images also supported flow cytometry data (Figure 2). Collectively, all three apoptosis assay results show that CLF significantly induces apoptosis in U266 cells. Our study is the first to show apoptotic and growth inhibitory effects of CLF on a p53-mutant resistant MM cell line U266. Our results also proved that combined therapy employing CLF together with chemotherapeutics seems to be a possible future therapeutic approach for MM. Further in vivo and clinical studies are warranted to evaluate its therapeutic potential for resistant MM treatment. Figure 1 Effect of 10 µM CLF on mitochondrial membrane potential. Flow cytometry fluorescence intensity A) Dot plots B) Bar plots of cells stained with JC-1 (n=3). C) Fluorescence microscopy image of JC-1-stained untreated cells indicating healthy mitochondria (red), D) In CLF-treated cells, green color shows diffusion of JC-1 from damaged mitochondria. Figure 1. Effect of 10 µM CLF on mitochondrial membrane potential. Flow cytometry fluorescence intensity A) Dot plots B) Bar plots of cells stained with JC-1 (n=3). C) Fluorescence microscopy image of JC-1-stained untreated cells indicating healthy mitochondria (red), D) In CLF-treated cells, green color shows diffusion of JC-1 from damaged mitochondria. Figure 2 Flow cytometry analysis of Annexin V-PE/7-AAD stained U266 cells treated with 10 µM CLF. A) Representative dot plots of Annexin V-PE vs 7-AAD signals gated as live, early apoptotic and late apoptotic quadrants B) Cell population bar graphs of corresponding dot plot quadrants (n=3). C) Early apoptotic U266 cell (right) stained with Annexin V-PE (green) and a late apoptotic U266 cell (left) stained with both Annexin V-PE (green) and nuclear dye PI (red) D) Close-up micrograph (160X) of a late apoptotic U266 cell. Figure 2. Flow cytometry analysis of Annexin V-PE/7-AAD stained U266 cells treated with 10 µM CLF. A) Representative dot plots of Annexin V-PE vs 7-AAD signals gated as live, early apoptotic and late apoptotic quadrants B) Cell population bar graphs of corresponding dot plot quadrants (n=3). C) Early apoptotic U266 cell (right) stained with Annexin V-PE (green) and a late apoptotic U266 cell (left) stained with both Annexin V-PE (green) and nuclear dye PI (red) D) Close-up micrograph (160X) of a late apoptotic U266 cell. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2017 ◽  
Vol 95 (5) ◽  
pp. 610-619 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenhe Zhu ◽  
Huiyan Wang ◽  
Wei Zhang ◽  
Na Xu ◽  
Junjie Xu ◽  
...  

Antler velvet polypeptide (VAP) is a prominent bioactive component of antler velvet. Whereas uncharacterized crude extracts have typically been used in pharmacological studies, in this study, the velvet polypeptide was isolated and purified by acid water extraction, ethanol precipitation, ammonium sulfate fractionation and precipitation, and chromatography, progressively. Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) were induced with H2O2 followed purified polypeptide treatment. Cell viability was evaluated by MTT assay. The apoptosis of cells was detected by fluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry. A cell analyzer was used to measure the mitochondrial membrane potential. The intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels were determined by flow cytometry. Oxidative stress related biochemical parameters were detected, and the expression of apoptosis-related proteins was examined by Western blot analysis. The results indicated that a 7.0 kDa polypeptide (VAP II) was isolated from antler velvet. VAP II enhanced cell viability, decreased cell apoptosis, reversed depolarization of mitochondrial membrane potential, decreased ROS levels, inhibited oxidative stress, and regulated the downstream signaling apoptotic cascade expression caused by H2O2. The protective effects of VAP II on HUVECs suggests a potential strategy for the treatment of cardiovascular disease.


2021 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 151-158
Author(s):  
Zuzana Solárová ◽  
Martin Kello ◽  
Peter Solár

Phytoalexins are substances with antimicrobial properties produced by plants after being attacked by microorganisms, especially phytopathogenic fungi and viruses. They are also currently being studied for their antitumor effect. We aimed to study the apoptosis-stimulating effect of homobrassinin and thiazino[6,5-b]indol in human ovarian adenocarcinoma A2780 and A2780cis cells via flow cytometric analysis of annexin V/PI, caspase 3 and 9 activity, cytochrome C release, and smac-diablo accumulation. Using the western blot technique, we also monitored the effect of both indoles on the response of heat shock proteins in these cells. Thiazino[6,5-b]indol showed more pronounced sensitizing and/or pro-apoptotic effect compared to homobrassinin accompanied by increased smac-diablo accumulation at earlier time intervals and pronounced externalization of phosphatidylserine at 72 h in A2780cis compared to A2780 cells. The apoptosis stimulating effect of thiazino[6,5-b]indol in A2780cis cells was associated with significant irreversible downregulation of HSP70 and HSP90 and partly with a decrease of HSP40. On the other hand, cisplatin-induced the apoptosis of sensitive A2780 cells with reversible downregulation of HSP40 and HSP57. In conclusion, the effect of thiazino[6,5-b]indol on resistant A2780cis cells could have a great utility in both the potential prevention and the treatment of other cisplatin-resistant tumor cells.


2010 ◽  
Vol 2010 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lærke Urbak ◽  
Henrik Vorum

Heat shock proteins (Hsps) are believed to primarily protect and maintain cell viability under stressful conditions such as those occurring during thermal and oxidative challenges chiefly by refolding and stabilizing proteins. Hsps are found throughout the various tissues of the eye where they are thought to confer protection from disease states such as cataract, glaucoma, and cancer. This minireview summarizes the placement, properties, and roles of Hsps in the eye and aims to provide a better comprehension of their function and involvement in ocular disease pathogenesis.


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