| Literature DB >> 25547924 |
Jie Ren1, Yuan Yuan Xu, He Fei Jiang, Meng Yang, Qian Hui Huang, Jie Yang, Kun Hu, Kun Wei.
Abstract
Solena amplexicaulis (Lam.) Gandhi (SA) has been used as a traditional medicine for the treatment of dysentery, multiple abscess, gastralgia, urethritis, and eczema in the minority area of China. This study was aimed to examine the cell proliferation inhibitory activity of the SA extract (SACE) and its mechanism of action in human hepatoma cell line (HepG2) and evaluate its anti-angiogenesis activity in human umbilical vein endothelial cell line (HUVEC). SACE could inhibit the growth of HepG2 cells in a dose- and time-dependent manner. FCM analysis showed that SACE could induce G2/M phase arrest, cell apoptosis, the mitochondrial membrane potential loss (ΔΨm) and increase the production of intracellular ROS of HepG2 cells. After treatment with SACE, topical morphological changes of apoptotic body formation, obvious increase of apoptosis-related protein expressions, such as Bax, cytochrome c, caspase-3, PARP-1, and decrease of Bcl-2, procaspase-9 protein expressions were observed at the same time. Moreover, SACE caused the significant inhibition of endothelial cell migration and tube formation in HUVEC cells. The results suggested that SACE could act as an angiogenesis inhibitor and induce cell apoptosis via a caspase-dependent mitochondrial pathway. Therefore, SACE could be a potent candidate for the prevention and treatment of liver cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Angiogenesis; Anticancer; Apoptosis; Nrf2; ROS; Solena amplexicaulis (Lam.) Gandhi
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25547924 DOI: 10.1142/S0192415X14500955
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Chin Med ISSN: 0192-415X Impact factor: 4.667