| Literature DB >> 20482751 |
Soumya J Koppikar1, Amit S Choudhari, Snehal A Suryavanshi, Shweta Kumari, Samit Chattopadhyay, Ruchika Kaul-Ghanekar.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chemoprevention, which includes the use of synthetic or natural agents (alone or in combination) to block the development of cancer in human beings, is an extremely promising strategy for cancer prevention. Cinnamon is one of the most widely used herbal medicines with diverse biological activities including anti-tumor activity. In the present study, we have reported the anti-neoplastic activity of cinnamon in cervical cancer cell line, SiHa.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20482751 PMCID: PMC2893107 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2407-10-210
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Figure 1Cinnamon alters growth kinetics of cervical cancer cells. (A) The cells were treated with various concentrations (0-80 μg/ml) of ACE-c for 24, 48 and 72 h, and the number of viable cells were counted using the trypan blue dye exclusion assay. The growth kinetics has been presented in the figure taken at different time points. Data represent mean ± SD of five different experiments. (B) The cells (1 × 103/ml) were grown in 6-well plates and treated with various concentrations (0-80 μg/ml) of ACE-c for one week. The cells were then stained with crystal violet and photographed. The experiments were repeated five times. (C) The cells (5 × 103) were treated with various concentrations (0-80 μg/ml) of ACE-c and grown in soft agar for 10 days, and the colonies were counted. Colonies were counted from at least 10 different areas, and the average of each is plotted. The data represent mean ± SD of five independent experiments.
Figure 2Cinnamon reduces migration potential.(A) Photomicrographs of time-lapse image at 0 and 15 h in a wound-healing assay in cells treated with different concentrations (0-80 μg/ml) of ACE-c. The upper panel of the image shows the wound made at 0 h. The lower panel shows cell movement corresponding to the distance traveled by the cells at 15 h of time-lapse imaging. (B) Rate of migration of cells during the wound healing assay analyzed by the time-lapse imaging of SiHa cells. Migration rate (μm/h) for each sample from five different fields was calculated. Error bars represent standard deviation and the data is representative of five independent experiments. (C) ACE-c treatment reduces the MMP-2 expression at mRNA level that has been shown by RT-PCR. β-actin was used as the loading control. Densitometric analysis of MMP-2 expression was performed using phosphorimager. The data represents mean ± SD of five independent experiments. (D) Gelatin zymography showing downregulation of MMP-2 expression in SiHa cells at 80 μg/ml ACE-c treatment compared to the untreated control cells. The bands were quantified by densitometry using phosphorimager and the data represents mean ± SD of five independent experiments.
Figure 3Cinnamon decreased the expression of Her-2 oncoprotein. (A) Western blot analysis showing decrease in Her-2 expression in SiHa cells treated with different concentrations of ACE-c (0-80 μg/ml). Equal amounts of protein were loaded on 10% SDS-gel and immunoblotted with anti-Her-2 antibody. Tubulin was used as a loading control. Densitometric analysis of Her-2 expression was performed using phosphorimager. The data represents mean ± SD of five independent experiments. (B) Confocal images of the cells treated with indicated concentrations of ACE-c showing decrease in Her-2 expression. The cells were stained indirectly for Her-2 using Cy3 antibody (Panel II) and counterstained with DAPI (Panel I). Panel III represents the merge images.
Figure 4Cinnamon induces apoptosis in SiHa cells through dysregulation of mitochondrial membrane potential. (A) SiHa cells were treated with different concentrations of ACE-c (0-80 μg/ml) followed by Annexin V-FITC and PI staining to analyze the effect of cinnamon in apoptosis. This was determined by FACS analysis showing the percentage of early (lower right quadrant) and late (upper right quadrant) apoptotic cells. (B) Flow cytometric analysis of the rapid calcium release in SiHa cells after treatment with cinnamon. Cells (5 × 103 cells) were treated with different doses (0-80 μg/ml) of ACE-c for 24 h. This was followed by loading the cells with Fluo-3/AM for 1 h before analyzing in calcium-free HBSS. Ionomycin was used as a positive control. Fluorescence intensities were measured with FACS Calibur flowcytometer. The data represents mean ± SD of five independent experiments. (C) Confocal images showing mitochondrial membrane depolarization induced by cinnamon. Control and cinnamon-treated SiHa cells were stained with JC-1 and the staining pattern was monitored by confocal laser scanning microscopy. For detection of J-aggregate form (red) (Panel II) and J-monomer alone (green) (Panel I), Argon-Krypton laser line was excited at 590 nm and 527 nm, respectively. Panel III represents the merge images. (D) Flow cytometric analysis with JC-1 dye showing decrease in red to green fluorescence ratio. Control (5 × 105) and cells treated with various concentrations (0-80 μg/ml) of ACE-c were stained with JC-1 dye for 30 min. Fluorescence intensities were measured with FACS Calibur flowcytometer. The data represents mean ± SD of five independent experiments.