4.7 Article

Lycopene-rich extract from red guava (Psidium guajava L.) displays cytotoxic effect against human breast adenocarcinoma cell line MCF-7 via an apoptotic-like pathway

Journal

FOOD RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL
Volume 105, Issue -, Pages 184-196

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodres.2017.10.045

Keywords

Carotenoid; Antioxidant; Breast cancer; Cytotoxicity

Funding

  1. FCT - POPH-QREN-Tipologia 4.1-Formacdo Avancada [SFRH/BD/97995/2013]
  2. Fundo Social Europeu and Ministerio da Ciencia, Tecnologia e Ensino Superior
  3. European Union (FEDER funds through COMPETE)
  4. National Funds (FCT) [UID/QUI/50006/2013]
  5. CAPES in Federal University of Piaui (UFPI) [99999.004236/2014-09]
  6. PNPD/CAPES

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This study investigated a lycopene-rich extract from red guava (LEG) for its chemical composition using spectrophotometry, mass spectrometry, attenuated total reflectance-fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-MIR), and computational studies. The cytotoxic activity of LEG and the underlying mechanism was studied in human breast adenocarcinoma cells (MCF-7), murine fibroblast cells (NIH-3 T3), BALB/c murine peritoneal macrophages, and sheep blood erythrocytes by evaluating the cell viability with 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-y1)2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) method and flow cytometry. Spectrophotometry analysis showed that LEG contained 20% of lycopene per extract dry weight. Experimental and theoretical ATR-FTIR suggests the presence of lycopene, whereas MS/MS spectra obtained after fragmentation of the molecular ion [M](+center dot) of 536.4364 show fragment ions at m/z 269.2259, 375.3034, 444.3788, and 467.3658, corroborating the presence of lycopene mostly related to all-trans configuration. Treatment with LEG (1600 to 6.25 mu g/mL) for 24 and 72 h significantly affected the viability of MCF-7 cells (mean half maximal inhibitory concentration [IC50] = 29.85 and 5.964 mu g/mL, respectively) but not NIH-3 T3 cells (IC50 = 1579 and 911.5 mu g/mL, respectively). Furthermore LEG at concentrations from 800 to 6.25 pg/mL presented low cytotoxicity against BALB/c peritoneal macrophages (IC50 >= 800 pg/mL) and no hemolytic activity. LEG (400 and 800 mu g/mL) caused reduction in the cell proliferation and induced cell cycle arrest, DNA fragmentation, modifications in the mitochondrial membrane potential, and morphologic changes related to granularity and size in MCF-7 cells; however, it failed to cause any significant damage to the cell membrane or display necrosis or traditional apoptosis. In conclusion, LEG was able to induce cytostatic and cytotoxic effects on breast cancer cells probably via induction of an apoptotic-like pathway.

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