4.5 Article

Cordycepin induces apoptosis in human pancreatic cancer cells via the mitochondrial-mediated intrinsic pathway and suppresses tumor growth in vivo

Journal

ONCOTARGETS AND THERAPY
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages 4479-4490

Publisher

DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.2147/OTT.S164670

Keywords

cordycepin; pancreatic cancer; proliferation; apoptosis; mitochondrial pathway

Funding

  1. Doctoral Innovation Fund Projects from Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine [BXJ201426]
  2. Hangzhou Science and Technology Commission Project [20140633B04]
  3. Shanghai Natural Science Foundation [17ZR1418500]
  4. Shanghai Pujiang Program [17PJD025]

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Background: Cordycepin, the main active ingredient of a traditional Chinese herbal remedy-extracted from Cordyceps sinensis-has been demonstrated as a very effective anti-inflammatory and antitumor drug. The present study investigated its antitumor effect on pancreatic cancer, a highly aggressive cancer with extremely poor prognosis due to malignancy, and clarified its underlying mechanism both in vitro and hi vivo. Methods: The antitumor viability of cordycepin on human pancreatic cancer MIAPaCa-2 and Capan-1 cells was determined by colony formation assays. Annexin V/PI double staining and flow cytometry assay were used to investigate whether cordycepin induced apoptosis and cell cycle arrest. The mitochondrial membrane potential (Delta Psi m) was analyzed by Rhodamine 123 staining, and expression of related proteins evaluated by Western blot and immunohistochemistry, both on pancreatic cancer cells and tumor xenografts to reveal the potential mechanism for the effect of cordycepin. Furthermore, the in vivo efficacy was examined on nude mice bearing MIAPaCa-2 cell tumors treated by intraperitoneal injection of cordycepin (0, 15, and 50 mg/kg/d) for 28 days. Results: Cordycepin inhibited cell viability, proliferation and colony formation ability and induced cell cycle arrest and early apoptosis of human pancreatic cancer cells (MIAPaCa-2 and Capan-1) hi a dose- and time-dependent manner. The same effect was also observed in vivo. Decrease of Delta Psi m and upregulation of Bax, cleaved caspase-3, cleaved caspase-9, and cleaved PARP as well as downregulation of Bcl-2 both in vitro and hi vivo indicated that the mitochondria-mediated intrinsic pathway was involved hi cordycepin's antitumor effect. Conclusion: Our data showed that cordycepin inhibited the activity of pancreatic cancer both in vitro and in vivo by regulating apoptosis-related protein expression through the mitochondrial pathway and suggest that cordycepin may be a promising therapeutic option for pancreatic cancer.

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