Lecanoric acid mediates anti-proliferative effects by an M phase arrest in colon cancer cells
- Author:
- Roser L.A., Erkoc P., Ingelfinger R., Henke M., Ulshöfer T., Schneider A.-K., Laux V., Geisslinger G., Schmitt I., Fürst R. & Schiffmann S.
- Year:
- 2022
- Journal:
- Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy
- Pages:
- 148: 112734 [9 p.]
- Url:
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biopha.2022.112734
Lichen extracts containing, among other compounds, depsides such as evernic acid, atranorin, and lecanoric acid
possess anti-proliferative effects. We aimed to identify lichen metabolites that are responsible for the observed
anti-proliferative effects. We performed cytotoxicity, cell colony, cell cycle and apoptosis assays in various cell
lines or primary immune cells. We analyzed several cell cycle proteins and apoptosis-related proteins to gain
insights into the underlying mechanism. All depsides reduced the viability of the tested cell lines (HCT-116,
HEK293T, HeLa, NIH3T3, RAW246.7) in a cell line-dependent manner with lecanoric acid being the most
effective. Atranorin did not influence the cell cycle or colony formation in HCT-116 cells, but induced apoptosis
in HCT-116 cells. Evernic acid showed no anti-proliferative effects. Lecanoric acid inhibited cell colony formation already at 0.03 µg/ml in HCT-116 cells and induced a G2 cell cycle block in several cell lines. Moreover,
lecanoric acid arrested the cell cycle, presumably in the M phase, since expression of cyclin B1 and phosphorylated histone H3 was upregulated, whereas the inactive cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (CDK1) was reduced in HCT116 cells. Most importantly, cell death induced by lecanoric acid was more prominent in cancer cells than in
primary human immune and endothelial cells. In conclusion, lecanoric acid seems to mediate its antiproliferative effects via arrest of cells in the M phase. Our data suggest lecanoric acid may be a potential new
candidate for anti-cancer therapy, because it has anti-proliferative effects on cancer cell lines, and does not affect
primary immune cells.
Keywords: Lecanoric acid; Atranorin; Evernic acid; M cell cycle arrest; Cyclin B1; CDK1; Lichens.
- Id:
- 34375
- Submitter:
- zdenek
- Post_time:
- Sunday, 22 May 2022 19:29