| Literature DB >> 23342279 |
Nam E Joo1, Kathryn Ritchie, Pachiyappan Kamarajan, Di Miao, Yvonne L Kapila.
Abstract
Nisin, a bacteriocin and commonly used food preservative, may serve as a novel potential therapeutic for treating head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), as it induces preferential apoptosis, cell cycle arrest, and reduces cell proliferation in HNSCC cells, compared with primary keratinocytes. Nisin also reduces HNSCC tumorigenesis in vivo. Mechanistically, nisin exerts these effects on HNSCC, in part, through CHAC1, a proapoptotic cation transport regulator, and through a concomitant CHAC1-independent influx of extracellular calcium. In addition, although CHAC1 is known as an apoptotic mediator, its effects on cancer cell apoptosis have not been examined. Our studies are the first to report CHAC1's new role in promoting cancer cell apoptosis under nisin treatment. These data support the concept that nisin decreases HNSCC tumorigenesis in vitro and in vivo by inducing increased cell apoptosis and decreased cell proliferation; effects that are mediated by activation of CHAC1, increased calcium influxes, and induction of cell cycle arrest. These findings support the use of nisin as a potentially novel therapeutic for HNSCC, and as nisin is safe for human consumption and currently used in food preservation, its translation into a clinical setting may be facilitated.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer biology; cellular biology; drug discovery and delivery; translational research
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23342279 PMCID: PMC3544465 DOI: 10.1002/cam4.35
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Med ISSN: 2045-7634 Impact factor: 4.452
Figure 1Nisin preferentially induces apoptosis and inhibits cell proliferation in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) cells versus primary keratinocytes. (A–C) DNA fragmentation after 24 h and (D–F) fold change in cell proliferation in HNSCC cells (UM-SCC-17B, HSC-3, and UM-SCC-14A) after treatment with nisin as indicated. P values for each data set are indicated individually.
Figure 2Nisin-mediated calcium influxes and apoptosis are blocked by bepridil (BP), a calcium channel blocker. (A) and (B) Calcium influx and (C) DNA fragmentation levels in UM-SCC-17B cells after treatment with nisin (80 μg/mL) and bepridil as indicated for 24 h. P values for each data set are indicated individually.
Figure 3Nisin induces cell cycle arrest. Cell cycle analysis of UM-SCC-17B cells after treatment with nisin (80 μg/mL) or control for 24 h.
Gene microarray table illustrating fold change in gene expression of HNSCC cells treated with nisin compared with untreated controls
| Symbol | Description | Gene ontology | Fold change |
|---|---|---|---|
| CHAC1 | ChaC, cation transport regulator homolog 1 ( | Protein binding | 4.42976 |
| PDE4C | Phosphodiesterase 4C, cAMP specific (phosphodiesterase E1 dunce homolog, Drosophila) | Signal transduction | 4.29073 |
| LGALS1 | Lectin, galactoside-binding, soluble, 1 (galectin 1) | Sugar binding | 3.64717 |
| Regulation of apoptosis | |||
| S100P | S100 calcium-binding protein P | Calcium ion binding | 3.21482 |
| Calcium-dependent protein binding | |||
| STC2 | Stanniocalcin 2 | Cell surface receptor linked signal transduction | 3.17316 |
| Response to nutrient | |||
| PILRA | Paired immunoglobulin-like type 2 receptor α | Protein binding | 2.58501 |
| Signal transduction | |||
| Integral to membrane | |||
| ARC | Activity-regulated cytoskeleton-associated protein | Membrane | 2.35159 |
| Cell junction | |||
| PYGM | Phosphorylase, glycogen; muscle (McArdle syndrome, glycogen storage disease type V) | Carbohydrate metabolic process | 2.34776 |
| Glycogen catabolic process | |||
| Glycogen phosphorylase activity | |||
| RAB3A | RAB3A, member RAS oncogene family | Membrane | 2.26615 |
| TEX14 | Testis expressed 14 | ATP binding | 2.24405 |
| SDPR | Serum deprivation response (phosphatidylserine-binding protein) | Phosphatidylserine binding | 2.20425 |
| Membrane fraction | |||
| PLA2G12B | Phospholipase A2, group XIIB | Phospholipase A2 activity | 2.18512 |
| Calcium ion binding | |||
| Lipid catabolic process | |||
| ITGAM | Integrin, alpha M (complement component 3 receptor 3 subunit) | Magnesium ion binding | 2.13638 |
| Calcium ion binding | |||
| External side of plasma membrane | |||
| Integral to membrane | |||
| SESN2 | Sestrin 2 | Cell cycle arrest | 2.13004 |
| PRR3 | Proline rich 3 | Zinc ion binding | 2.09132 |
| Metal ion binding | |||
| CYP2B6 | Cytochrome P450, family 2, subfamily B, polypeptide 6 | Endoplasmic reticulum | 2.06563 |
| Electron transport | |||
| Membrane | |||
| Metal ion binding | |||
| LAMA4 | Laminin, alpha 4 | Receptor binding | 2.03249 |
| NR4A2 | Nuclear receptor subfamily 4, group A, member 2 | Steroid hormone receptor activity | 2.02835 |
| Zinc ion binding | |||
| Metal ion binding | |||
| ZNF34 | Zinc finger protein 34 | Zinc ion binding | 2.02091 |
| Metal ion binding | |||
| TNFSF11 | Tumor necrosis factor (ligand) superfamily, member 11 | Integral to plasma membrane | 2.00225 |
| Membrane | |||
| Cell differentiation | |||
| ZBTB24 | Zinc finger and BTB domain containing 24 | Metal ion binding | −3.76108 |
| ZBTB24 | Zinc finger and BTB domain containing 24 | Metal ion binding | −3.5799 |
| ARHGAP11B | Rho GTPase activating protein 11B | Signal transduction | −2.5269 |
| ALS2 | Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis 2 (juvenile) | Response to oxidative stress | −2.52641 |
| TRSPAP1 | tRNA selenocysteine-associated protein 1 | Protein binding | 2.43763 |
| MARS2 | Methionyl-tRNA synthetase 2, mitochondrial | Mitochondrion | −2.36375 |
| Mitochondrial matrix | |||
| FST | Follistatin | Negative regulation of cell differentiation | −2.34739 |
| SETX | Senataxin | ATP binding | −2.30816 |
| Cell death | |||
| PARG | Poly (ADP-ribose) glycohydrolase | Response to DNA damage stimulus | −2.27345 |
| KCTD1 | Potassium channel tetramerization domain containing 1 | Voltage-gated potassium channel activity | −2.26108 |
| Protein binding | |||
| Potassium ion transport | |||
| Voltage-gated potassium channel complex | |||
| Membrane | |||
| PPAN | Peter pan homolog (Drosophila) | Protein binding | −2.2312 |
| ZNF718 | Zinc finger protein 718 | Zinc ion binding | −2.1316 |
| Metal ion binding | |||
| MED13 | Mediator complex subunit 13 | Receptor activity | −2.11608 |
| Transcription | |||
| CCNT2 | Cyclin T2 | Cell cycle | −2.01302 |
| Cell division |
Figure 4CHAC1 suppression inhibits nisin-induced DNA fragmentation. (A) Immunoblot showing CHAC1 expression in UM-SCC-17B cells after treatment with nisin (80 μg/mL) for 24 h. β-Actin served as loading control. (B) DNA fragmentation, (C) fold change in proliferation, and (D) calcium influx levels in UM-SCC-17B cells after transfection with CTRL siRNA or CHAC1 siRNA and treated with nisin (80 μg/mL) for 24 h. Inset, immunoblot showing CHAC1 levels after transfection with CHAC1 siRNA. P values for each data set are indicated individually.
Figure 5CHAC1 overexpression increases nisin-induced DNA fragmentation. (A) DNA fragmentation, (B) fold change in proliferation, and (C) calcium influx levels in UM-SCC-17B cells after transfection with CHAC1 cDNA and treated with nisin (80 μg/mL) for 24 h. Inset, immunoblot showing CHAC1 levels after transfection with CHAC1 cDNA. P values for each data set are indicated individually.
Figure 6Nisin administration reduces HNSCC tumor burden in mice. (A) Mice were injected with UM-SCC-17B cells then administered either water (CTRL) or nisin (200 mg/kg per day) for 3 weeks. Left panels show superficial tumors, middle panels show dissected tumors, and right panels show dissected and isolated tumors. (B) Tumor volumes for mice injected with UM-SCC-17B cells and administered either water (CTRL) or nisin (200 mg/kg per day) for 3 weeks. P values for each data set are indicated individually.
Figure 7CHAC1 downregulation counteract the tumor-suppressive effects of nisin in vivo. (A) Top, immunoblots show CHAC1 levels after stable CHAC1 suppression using lentiviral particles (CTRL shRNA or CHAC1-shRNA) in UM-SCC-17B cells. Bottom, images show the dissected tumors of mice injected with CTRL shRNA or CHAC1-shRNA and administered either water (CTRL) or nisin (200 mg/kg per day) for 3 weeks. (B) Tumor volumes for mice injected with CTRL shRNA or CHAC1-shRNA and administered water (CTRL) or nisin (200 mg/kg per day) for 3 weeks. P values for each data set are indicated individually.