4.6 Article

The Curcumin Analogue 1,5-Bis(2-hydroxyphenyl)-1,4-pentadiene-3-one Induces Apoptosis and Downregulates E6 and E7 Oncogene Expression in HPV16 and HPV18-Infected Cervical Cancer Cells

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 20, Issue 7, Pages 11830-11860

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules200711830

Keywords

curcumin analogue; diarylpentanoid; cervical cancer; cytotoxicity; apoptosis; oncogene; E6; E7; HeLa cells; CaSki cells

Funding

  1. Jeffrey Cheah School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Monash University Malaysia
  2. Fundamental Research Grant Scheme under the Ministry of Higher Education (MOHE), Malaysia [FRGS2/2010/SS/MUSM/02/1]

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In an effort to study curcumin analogues as an alternative to improve the therapeutic efficacy of curcumin, we screened the cytotoxic potential of four diarylpentanoids using the HeLa and CaSki cervical cancer cell lines. Determination of their EC50 values indicated relatively higher potency of 1,5-bis(2-hydroxyphenyl)-1,4-pentadiene-3-one (MS17, 1.03 +/- 0.5 mu M; 2.6 +/- 0.9 mu M) and 1,5-bis(4-hydroxy-3-methoxyphenyl)-1,4-pentadiene-3-one (MS13, 2.8 +/- 0.4; 6.7 +/- 2.4 mu M) in CaSki and HeLa, respectively, with significantly greater growth inhibition at 48 and 72 h of treatment compared to the other analogues or curcumin. Based on cytotoxic and anti-proliferative activity, MS17 was selected for comprehensive apoptotic studies. At 24 h of treatment, fluorescence microscopy detected that MS17-exposed cells exhibited significant morphological changes consistent with apoptosis, corroborated by an increase in nucleosomal enrichment due to DNA fragmentation in HeLa and CaSki cells and activation of caspase-3 activity in CaSki cells. Quantitative real-time PCR also detected significant down-regulation of HPV18-and HPV16-associated E6 and E7 oncogene expression following treatment. The overall data suggests that MS17 treatment has cytotoxic, anti-proliferative and apoptosis-inducing potential in HPV-positive cervical cancer cells. Furthermore, its role in down-regulation of HPV-associated oncogenes responsible for cancer progression merits further investigation into its chemotherapeutic role for cervical cancer.

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