| Literature DB >> 28401470 |
M Dhaneesha1, C Benjamin Naman2, K P Krishnan3, Rupesh Kumar Sinha3, P Jayesh1, Valsamma Joseph1, I S Bright Singh1, William H Gerwick2, T P Sajeevan4.
Abstract
After screening marine actinomycetes isolated from sediment samples collected from the Arctic fjord Kongsfjorden for potential anticancer activity, an isolate identified as Streptomyces artemisiae MCCB 248 exhibited promising results against the NCI-H460 human lung cancer cell line. H460 cells treated with the ethyl acetate extract of strain MCCB 248 and stained with Hoechst 33342 showed clear signs of apoptosis, including shrinkage of the cell nucleus, DNA fragmentation and chromatin condensation. Further to this treated cells showed indications of early apoptotic cell death, including a significant proportion of Annexin V positive staining and evidence of DNA damage as observed in the TUNEL assay. Amplified PKS 1 and NRPS genes involved in secondary metabolite production showed only 82% similarity to known biosynthetic genes of Streptomyces, indicating the likely production of a novel secondary metabolite in this extract. Additionally, chemical dereplication efforts using LC-MS/MS molecular networking suggested the presence of a series of undescribed tetraene polyols. Taken together, these results revealed that this Arctic S. artemisiae strain MCCB 248 is a promising candidate for natural products drug discovery and genome mining for potential anticancer agents.Entities:
Keywords: Actinomycetes; Anticancer; Apoptosis; Natural products; Streptomyces
Year: 2017 PMID: 28401470 PMCID: PMC5388659 DOI: 10.1007/s13205-017-0610-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: 3 Biotech ISSN: 2190-5738 Impact factor: 2.406
Fig. 1a Colony morphology and b scanning electron micrograph of aerial mycelia of S. artemisia strain MCCB 248 after incubation for 14 days on Nutrient agar at 28 °C
Fig. 2Percentage growth inhibition by various actinomycete crude extracts on NCI-H460 cell lines at 50 µg/mL (normalized to a control without extract)
Fig. 3Phase contrast microscope image (20×) of NCI-H460 cells; a control cells, b treated cells with S. artemisiae MCCB 248 extract at its IC50 value for 24 h
Fig. 4Neighbour-joining phylogenetic dendrogram based on 16S rRNA gene sequences showing relationships between the isolated S. artemisiae MCCB 248 and related taxa
Fig. 5Fluorescent microscope image (20×) of Hoechst 33342 stained H-460 cells; a control cells, and b S. artemisiae MCCB 248 extract treated cells. Also shown are fluorescent microscope images (40×) of the TUNEL assay of c control cells, and d S. artemisiae MCCB 248 extract treated cells for 24 h
Fig. 6Fluorescent microscope image (20×) of Annexin-V/PI double-staining assay. After treating with S. artemisiae MCCB 248 extract, cells were stained with Annexin V-FITC and propidium iodide and analyzed after 0, 6, 12 and 24 h of treatment
Fig. 7Percentage of H-460 cells showing early and late apoptotic cell death at 0, 6, 12, 24 h after exposure to the extract of S. artemisiae MCCB 248 (data shown are mean of four independent observations and its standard deviation)