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The effect of Aflatoxin B1 on tumor-related genes and phenotypic characters of MCF7 and MCF10A cells

Authors :
Ahmed Adam, Mowaffaq Adam
Muhd Kamal, Laina Zarisa
Kanakal, Mahibub
Babu, Dinesh
Dahham, Saad Sabbar
Tabana, Yasser
Lok, Bronwyn
Bermoy, Brittany M.
Yunus, Muhammad Amir
Than, Leslie Thian Lung
Barakat, Khaled
Sandai, Doblin
Ahmed Adam, Mowaffaq Adam
Muhd Kamal, Laina Zarisa
Kanakal, Mahibub
Babu, Dinesh
Dahham, Saad Sabbar
Tabana, Yasser
Lok, Bronwyn
Bermoy, Brittany M.
Yunus, Muhammad Amir
Than, Leslie Thian Lung
Barakat, Khaled
Sandai, Doblin
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The fungal toxin aflatoxin B1 (AB1) and its reactive intermediate, aflatoxin B1-8, 9 epoxide, could cause liver cancer by inducing DNA adducts. AB1 exposure can induce changes in the expression of several cancer-related genes. In this study, the effect of AB1 exposure on breast cancer MCF7 and normal breast MCF10A cell lines at the phenotypic and epigenetic levels was investigated to evaluate its potential in increasing the risk of breast cancer development. We hypothesized that, even at low concentrations, AB1 can cause changes in the expression of important genes involved in four pathways, i.e., p53, cancer, cell cycle, and apoptosis. The transcriptomic levels of BRCA1, BRCA2, p53, HER1, HER2, cMyc, BCL2, MCL1, CCND1, WNT3A, MAPK1, MAPK3, DAPK1, Casp8, and Casp9 were determined in MCF7 and MCF10A cells. Our results illustrate that treating both cells with AB1 induced cytotoxicity and apoptosis with reduction in cell viability in a concentration-dependent manner. Additionally, AB1 reduced reactive oxygen species levels. Phenotypically, AB1 caused cell-cycle arrest at G1, hypertrophy, and increased cell migration rates. There were changes in the expression levels of several tumor-related genes, which are known to contribute to activating cancer pathways. The effects of AB1 on the phenotype and epigenetics of both MCF7 and MCF10A cells associated with cancer development observed in this study suggest that AB1 is a potential risk factor for developing breast cancer.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1380648185
Document Type :
Electronic Resource