4.7 Article

Antitumour effect of polyoxomolybdates:: induction of apoptotic cell death and autophagy in in vitro and in vivo models

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 98, Issue 2, Pages 399-409

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6604133

Keywords

polyoxomolybdate; apoptosis; autophagy

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Polyoxomolybdates (PMs) as discrete molybdenum-oxide cluster anions have been investigated in the course of study of their medical applications. Here, we show the significant antitumour potency of the polyoxomolybdate [ Me3NH](6)[(H2Mo12O28)-O-V(OH)(12) ((MoO3)-O-VI)(4)]center dot 2H(2)O (PM-17), which is a photo-reduced compound of [NH3Pri](6)[Mo7O24]center dot 3H(2)O. The effect of PM-17 on the growth of cancer cell lines and xenografts was assessed by a cell viability test and analysis of tumour expansion rate. Morphological analysis was carried out by Hoechst staining, flow-cytometric analysis of Annexin V staining, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated 'nick-end' labelling staining, and electron-microscopic analysis. Activation of autophagy was detected by western blotting and fluorescence-microscopic analysis of the localisation of GFP-LC3 in transfected tumour cells. PM-17 inhibited the growth of human pancreatic cancer (AsPC-1) xenografts in a nude mice model, and induced morphological alterations in tumour cells. Correspondingly, PM-17 repressed the proliferation of AsPC-1 cells and human gastric cancer cells (MKN45) depending on the dose in vitro. We observed apoptotic patterns as the formation of apoptotic small bodies and translocation of phosphatidylserine by Hoechst staining and flow-cytometric analysis following Annexin V staining, and in parallel, autophagic conformation by the formulation of autophagosomes and localisation of GFP-LC3 by electron- and fluorescence-microscopic analysis.

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