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Antitumor activity and expression profiles of genes induced by sulforaphane in human melanoma cells

Authors :
Alessandra Pistilli
Mario Rende
Stefano Calvieri
Ugo Bottoni
Andrea Crisanti
Ekaterina Kuligina
Paola Arcidiacono
Francesco Ragonese
Anna Maria Stabile
Roberta Spaccapelo
Source :
European Journal of Nutrition
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Springer Verlag, 2017.

Abstract

Purpose Human melanoma is a highly aggressive incurable cancer due to intrinsic cellular resistance to apoptosis, reprogramming, proliferation and survival during tumour progression. Sulforaphane (SFN), an isothiocyanate found in cruciferous vegetables, plays a role in carcinogenesis in many cancer types. However, the cytotoxic molecular mechanisms and gene expression profiles promoted by SFN in human melanoma remain unknown. Methods Three different cell lines were used: two human melanoma A375 and 501MEL and human epidermal melanocytes (HEMa). Cell viability and proliferation, cell cycle analysis, cell migration and invasion and protein expression and phosphorylation status of Akt and p53 upon SFN treatment were determined. RNA-seq of A375 was performed at different time points after SFN treatment. Results We demonstrated that SFN strongly decreased cell viability and proliferation, induced G2/M cell cycle arrest, promoted apoptosis through the activation of caspases 3, 8, 9 and hampered migration and invasion abilities in the melanoma cell lines. Remarkably, HEMa cells were not affected by SFN treatment. Transcriptomic analysis revealed regulation of genes involved in response to stress, apoptosis/cell death and metabolic processes. SFN upregulated the expression of pro-apoptotic genes, such as p53, BAX, PUMA, FAS and MDM2; promoted cell cycle inhibition and growth arrest by upregulating EGR1, GADD45B, ATF3 and CDKN1A; and simultaneously acted as a potent inhibitor of genotoxicity by launching the stress-inducible protein network (HMOX1, HSPA1A, HSPA6, SOD1). Conclusion Overall, the data show that SFN cytotoxicity in melanoma derives from complex and concurrent mechanisms during carcinogenesis, which makes it a promising cancer prevention agent. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s00394-017-1527-7) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Nutrition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....07a02c32f3554ee5d583cbf4839bc1f8