Title of article :
Cardanol isolated from Thai Apis mellifera propolis induces cell cycle arrest and apoptosis of BT-474 breast cancer cells via p21 upregulation
Author/Authors :
Buahorm, Sureerat Program in Biotechnology - Faculty of Science - Chulalongkorn University - 254 Phayathai Road - Bangkok 10330, Thailand , Puthong, Songchan Institute of Biotechnology and Genetic Engineering - Chulalongkorn University - 254 Phayathai Road - Bangkok 10330, Thailand , Palaga, Tanapat Department of Microbiology - Faculty of Science - Chulalongkorn University - 254 Phayathai Road - Bangkok 10330, Thailand , Lirdprapamongkol, Kriengsak Laboratory of Biochemistry - Chulabhorn Research Institute - Vipawadee Rangsit Highway - Bangkok 10210, Thailand , Phuwapraisirisan, Preecha Department of Chemistry - Faculty of Science - Chulalongkorn University - 254 Phayathai Road - Bangkok 10330, Thailand , Svasti, Jisnuson Laboratory of Biochemistry - Chulabhorn Research Institute - Vipawadee Rangsit Highway - Bangkok 10210, Thailand , Chanchao, Chanpen Department of Biology - Faculty of Science - Chulalongkorn University - 254 Phayathai Road - Bangkok 10330, Thailand
Abstract :
Background: Cardanol was previously reported to be an antiproliferative compound purified from Thai Apis mellifera propolis. By morphology, it could induce the cell death to many cancer cell lines but not the control (non-transformed
human foreskin fibroblast cell line, Hs27). Here, it was aimed to evaluate the molecular effects of cardanol on breast
cancer derived cell line (BT-474).
Methods: Morphological changes in BT-474 cells induced by cardanol compared to doxorubicin were evaluated by
light microscopy, cytotoxicity by using the 3- (4, 5-dimethyl-thiazol-2-yl) 2, 5-diphenyl-tetrazolium bromide (MTT) assay,
induction of cell cycle arrest and cell death by flow cytometric analysis of propidium iodide and annexin-V stained
cells, and changes in the expression level of genes involved in the control of apoptosis and the cell cycle by
quantitative reverse transcriptase-PCR (qRT-PCR) and western blot analyses.
Results: It revealed that cardanol induced a time- and dose-dependent cytotoxicity along with cell shrinkage and
detachment from substratum. Cardanol caused cell cycle arrest at the G1 subphase (as opposed to at the G2/M subphase
seen with doxorubicin) and cell death by late apoptosis, with both late apoptosis (27.2 ± 1.1 %) and necrosis (25.4 ± 1.4 %)
being found in cardanol treated cells after 72 h, compared to a lower proportion of apoptosis (4.3 ± 0.4 %) and higher
proportion of necrosis (35.8 ± 13.0 %) induced by doxorubicin. Moreover, cardanol changed the transcript expression
levels of genes involved in the control of apoptosis (increased DR5 and Bcl-2 expression and decreased Mcl-1, MADD and
c-FLIPP) and cell division (increased p21 and E2FI and decreased cyclin D1, cyclin E, CDK4 and CDK2 expression), as well as
increasing the level of p21 p-ERK, p-JNK and p-p38 and decreasing cyclin D. This accounts for the failure to progress from
the G1 to the S subphase.
Conclusion: Cardanol is a potential chemotherapeutic agent for breast cancer.
Keywords :
Apis mellifera , Cardanol , Cell arrest , Cell death , p21 , Propolis
Journal title :
Daru:Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences