4.5 Article

CopA3 peptide induces permanent cell-cycle arrest in colorectal cancer cells

Journal

MECHANISMS OF AGEING AND DEVELOPMENT
Volume 196, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.mad.2021.111497

Keywords

Colorectal cancer; Phase cell-cycle arrest; Free radicals; Oxidative stress biomarkers; DNA damage response

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Korea [NRF2019R1A2B5B01070543, NRF2019H1D3A1A01103012]

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CopA3 induces cell-cycle arrest in colorectal cancer cells through a ROS-mediated pathway, leading to inhibition of cell growth and proliferation.
Cell-cycle arrest reflects an accumulation of responses to DNA damage that sequentially affects cell growth and division. Herein, we analyzed the effect of the 9-mer dimer defensin-like peptide, CopA3, against colorectal cancer cell growth and proliferation in a dose-dependent manner upon 96 h of treatment. As observed, CopA3 treatment significantly affected cancer cell growth, reduced colony formation ability, increased the number of SA-beta-Gal positive cells, and remarkably reduced Ki67 protein expression. Notably, in HCT-116 cells, CopA3 (5 mu M) treatment effectively increased oxidative stress and, as a result, amplified the endogenous ROS, mitochondrial ROS, and NO content in the cells, which further activated the DNA damage response and caused cell-cycle arrest at the G1 phase. The prolonged cell-cycle arrest elevated the release of inflammatory cytokines in the cell supernatant. Nevertheless, mechanistically, NAC treatment effectively reversed the CopA3 effect and significantly reduced the oxidative stress; subsequently rescuing the cells from G1 phase arrest. Overall, CopA3 treatment can inhibit the growth and proliferation of colorectal cancer cells by inducing cell-cycle arrest through the ROS-mediated pathway.

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