Caffeic acid phenethyl ester (CAPE) is an active component isolated from propolis. The aim of this study was to investigate the mechanism of CAPE-induced apoptosis in human leukemic HL-60 cells. It was found that CAPE entered HL-60 cells very quickly and then inhibited their survival in a concentration- and time-dependent manner. CAPE induced characteristic DNA fragmentation and morphological changes typical of apoptosis in these cells. Estimation of the apoptotic percentage showed a time-dependent increase after CAPE (6 microg/mL) treatment (up to 66.7 +/- 2.0% at 72 h). Treatment with CAPE caused rapid activation of caspase-3 after 4 h, down-regulation of Bcl-2 expression after 6 h, and up-regulation of Bax expression after 16 h. These results suggest that CAPE is a potent apoptosis-inducing agent; its action is accompanied by activation of caspase-3, down-regulation of Bcl-2, and up-regulation of Bax in human leukemic HL-60 cells.
PurposeThis work aimed to investigate the effect of costunolide, a sesquiterpene lactone isolated from Michelia compressa, on cell cycle distribution and radiosensitivity of human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cells.MethodsThe assessment used in this study included: cell viability assay, cell cycle analysis by DNA histogram, expression of phosphorylated histone H3 (Ser 10) by flow cytometer, mitotic index by Liu's stain and morphological observation, mitotic spindle alignment by immunofluorescence of alpha-tubulin, expression of cell cycle-related proteins by Western blotting, and radiation survival by clonogenic assay.ResultsOur results show that costunolide reduced the viability of HA22T/VGH cells. It caused a rapid G2/M arrest at 4 hours shown by DNA histogram. The increase in phosphorylated histone H3 (Ser 10)-positive cells and mitotic index indicates costunolide-treated cells are arrested at mitosis, not G2, phase. Immunofluorescence of alpha-tubulin for spindle formation further demonstrated these cells are halted at metaphase. Costunolide up-regulated the expression of phosphorylated Chk2 (Thr 68), phosphorylated Cdc25c (Ser 216), phosphorylated Cdk1 (Tyr 15) and cyclin B1 in HA22T/VGH cells. At optimal condition causing mitotic arrest, costunolide sensitized HA22T/VGH HCC cells to ionizing radiation with sensitizer enhancement ratio up to 1.9.ConclusionsCostunolide could reduce the viability and arrest cell cycling at mitosis in hepatoma cells. Logical exploration of this mitosis-arresting activity for cancer therapeutics shows costunolide enhanced the killing effect of radiotherapy against human HCC cells.
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