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Monascus pigment rubropunctatin: a potential dual agent for cancer chemotherapy and phototherapy Yunquan Zheng, Yun Zhang, Deshan Chen, Haijun Chen, Ling Lin, Chengzhuo Zheng, and Yanghao Guo J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.5b05343 • Publication Date (Web): 08 Mar 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on March 10, 2016
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Monascus pigment rubropunctatin: a potential dual agent for cancer
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chemotherapy and phototherapy
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Yunquan Zheng,*,†,§ Yun Zhang,†,§ Deshan Chen,† Haijun Chen,*,† Ling Lin,†
4
Chengzhuo Zheng,† Yanghao Guo§
5
6
†
College of Chemistry, Fuzhou University, 2 Xueyuan Road, Fuzhou 350116, China
7
§
Fujian Key Laboratory of Medical Instrument and Pharmaceutical Technology,
8
Fuzhou University, 523 Gongye Road, Fuzhou 350002, China
9
Corresponding authors:
10
* Yunquan Zheng, PhD
11
College of Chemistry
12
Fuzhou University
13
Fuzhou, Fujian 350116, China
14
Email:
[email protected] 15
*Haijun Chen, PhD
16
College of Chemistry
17
Fuzhou University
18
Fuzhou, Fujian 350116, China
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Email:
[email protected] ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
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ABSTRACT
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The Monascus pigment, rubropunctatin, was extracted and purified from red mold
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rice (RMR) and its cytotoxic activities against human cervical carcinoma HeLa cells
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were studied under the conditions with or without light irradiation. The IC50 value of
24
rubropunctatin against HeLa cells in the dark was 93.71 ± 1.96 µM (24 h), while the
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cytotoxic activity was enhanced more than 3 times (IC50 = 24.02 ± 2.17 µM) under
26
light irradiation(halogen lamp: 500 W, wavelength: 597-622 nm, fluence rate: 15 mW
27
cm-2, for 30 min). However the IC50 value of rubropunctatin against the immortalized
28
human cervical epithelial H8 cells was more than 300 µM even under light irradiation,
29
indicating that rubropunctatin has a favorable selectivity index (SI). Treatment of
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HeLa cells with rubropunctatin in the dark or under light irradiation resulted in a dose
31
dependent apoptosis, as validated by the increase in the percentage of cells in sub-G1
32
phase and phosphatidylserine externalization, and the inductive effect on HeLa cell
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apoptosis was boosted by the light irradiation. In addition, treatment with
34
rubropunctatin alone or under light irradiation was found to induce apoptosis in HeLa
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cells via the mitochondrial pathway, including loss of mitochondrial membrane
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potential, activation of caspase-3, -8 and -9, and increase of the level of intracellular
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ROS. It was suggested that rubropunctatin could be a promising natural dual
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anticancer agent for photodynamic therapy and chemotherapy.
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KEYWORDS: Monascus, rubropunctatin, chemotherapy, phototherapy
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INTRODUCTION
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Cancer has become a significant public health problem due to its high rates of
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morbidity and mortality. Recently, development of innovative anticancer drugs with
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enhanced efficacy and improved selectivity is one of the most important works in
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medicinal chemistry research communities. This paradigm has resulted in the
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successful development of numerous anticancer agents. However, almost all kinds of
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the existing chemotherapeutic drugs in the clinical application for cancer treatment
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often result in therapeutic resistance and undesired side effects in all types of cancers.
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In addition, it is reported that cancer therapy relying on a single therapeutic treatment
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is not always reliable due to the complex network of cellular pathways.1 Therefore, it
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is still a big challenge to find a suitable therapy for human cancer treatment.
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To date, combination therapy has been considered as a promising strategy to take
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the advantage of each treatment to minimize undesirable adverse effects and improve
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therapeutic efficiency.2,
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phototherapy has emerged as an effective strategy for cancer therapy.4-6 Phototherapy
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also known as photodynamic therapy (PDT) is a well-established clinical cancer
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treatment that involves a certain photosensitizer, light and molecular oxygen.7, 8 Upon
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irradiation with the light of an appropriate wave-length, the excited photosensitizer
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transfers energy from the ground state to the excited state to generate highly reactive
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species, leading to irreversible damage of cancer cells. Recently, several
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nanoparticle-based delivery systems including silica nanocages and lipid-polymers
3
In particular, the combination of chemotherapy and
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have been developed to release the chemotherapeutic drug and photosensitizer
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simultaneously in the tumour region to exert the synergistic anticancer effect.9-11
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Although these important progresses have demonstrated the obvious potential both in
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vitro and in vivo, there have been few report of the small organic molecule acting as
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both chemotherapeutic agent and photosensitizer.7, 8, 12
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Monascus is a versatile genus that can be used for the production of various
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metabolites and is useful as food additives and pharmaceuticals. 13, 14 In our previous
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work six pigment components were successfully separated from Monascus product,
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which were two yellow pigments (monascin and ankaflavin), two orange pigments
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(rubropunctatin and monascorubrin) and two red pigments (rubropunctatamine and
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monascorubramine). The cytotoxicity of the Monascus pigments to various human
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cancer cells (SH-SY5Y, HepG2, HT-29, BGC-823, AGS, and MKN45) was separately
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evaluated. rubropunctatin showed the highest anticancer effect within the tested
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compounds. The inhibition effect of rubropunctatin was higher than that of taxol on
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the growth of the human gastric cancer cell SH-SY5Y (P < 0.05), BGC-823 (P yellow light > green light > blue light (Table 1 ).
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Cytotoxicity of Rubropunctatin to HeLa Cells under Conditions with or without
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Irradiation. To validate whether rubropunctatin could be used as a photosensitizer
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against cancer cells, we investigated the cytotoxic effect of rubropunctatin on the
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growth of HeLa cells under conditions with or without light irradiation.
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rubropunctatin showed an obvious concentration-dependent inhibition effect on HeLa
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cells from 3 to 120 µM under conditions either with or without light
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irradiation. rubropunctatin inhibited the proliferation of HeLa cells in the dark with an
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IC50 of 93.71 ± 1.96 µM after 24 h incubation. The experimental data indicated that
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rubropunctatin alone has a modest inhibitory effect on HeLa cells. In the presence of
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light irradiation, rubropunctatin displayed a remarkable growth inhibitory effect
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against HeLa cells with an IC50 of 24.02 ± 2.17 µM after 24 h incubation. It was
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suggested that rubropunctatin could be used as a promising natural dual anticancer
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agent for photodynamic therapy and chemotherapy.
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A time-course study revealed that rubropunctatin in the dark displayed no toxic
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effect on HeLa cells at the first 4 hours however it obviously inhibited the
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proliferation of HeLa cells after 12 h or 24 h incubation (Table 2). Rubropunctatin
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decreased the viability of HeLa cells in a time-dependent manner under conditions
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with or without light irradiation.
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As shown in Table 2, Taxol was used as a control and its cytotoxicity against Hela
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cells was determined. Under conditions without irradiation, Taxol showed a good
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inhibition effect on the growth of Hela cells with IC50 of 73.31±2.23µmol/L at 12h
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and 44.32±3.84µmol/L at 24h. However, no obvious change was observed, compared
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with the determined data in the absence of light irradiation with those in the presence
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of light irradiation, IC50 of 76.86±2.54µmol/L at 12h and 42.71±4.31µmol/L at 24h.
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It was notable that under conditions with light irradiation, the inhibition effect on
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the treated Hela cells with rubropunctatin was higher than that with taxol. In addition,
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rubropunctatin was basically no-cytotoxic to the immortalized human cervical
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epithelial H8 cells with the IC50 value greater than 300 µM (at 24h) in the dark or
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under light irradiation, indicating that rubropunctatin has a favorable selectivity index
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(SI).
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Apoptosis of HeLa Cells Induced by Rubropunctatin under Conditions with or
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without Light Irradiation. After being treated separately with different
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concentrations of rubropunctatin for 24 h, the AO/EB staining of HeLa cells was
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performed to evaluate the mode of cell death under the conditions with or without
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light irradiation. The cell morphology was observed under the fluorescence
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microscope. Figure 3 showed clear morphological changes in the nucleolus, internal
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organelles and plasma membrane integrity caused by rubropunctatin in a
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concentration-dependent manner. In the presence or absence of light irradiation, the
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rubropunctatin untreated HeLa cells showed uniform green fluorescence with normal
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morphology, indicating that light irradiation alone did not change morphology of the
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cells. After rubropunctatin treatment without or with light irradiation, extensive
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nuclear margination accompanied by chromatin condensation and fragmentation,
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indicative of apoptotic cell death, was observed in the treated cells.23, 24 With the
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increase of rubropunctatin concentration, the marked nuclear condensation, membrane
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breakage, nuclear fragmentation and apoptotic bodies became visibly dominant and
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fluorescence turned into orange, indicating cell death.
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HeLa cells which were incubated with 30 µM rubropunctatin in the absence of light
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irradiation showed green fluorescence. It demonstrated that the cell membranes were
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normally integrated and kept EB out of the cells. When treated with the same
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concentration of rubropunctatin in the presence of light irradiation, the fluorescence
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turned into orange and showed that the membranes were impaired. The results of
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AO/EB nuclear staining indicated remarkable induction of apoptosis in HeLa cells by
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rubropunctatin under the conditions with light irradiation.
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Cell Cycle Analysis. To characterize cell death induced by rubropunctatin, cell cycle
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analysis was performed by staining the cells with PI (Table 3). HeLa cells were
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treated separately with different concentrations of rubropunctatin (0, 3, 30, 60, 90 and
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120 µM) under the conditions with or without light irradiation. The data showed that
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treatment with rubropunctatin increased the fraction of cells in the sub-G1 phase (an
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apoptotic phenomenon) in a dose-dependent manner under light irradiation, while
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treatment with rubropunctatin in the dark only enhanced the fraction of cells in the
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sub-G1 phase at the high concentration. However, no arrest at any phase of the cell
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cycle was found. It was hypothesized that rubropunctatin might inhibit cell growth of
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the HeLa cells through induction of apoptosis, and the affection was enhanced by
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light irradiation.
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Apoptotic Analysis of HeLa Cells treated with Rubropunctatin under the
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Conditions with or without Light Irradiation. The cytotoxic effect of chemo-
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photodynamic treatment on HeLa cells was further quantified by flow cytometry.
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HeLa cells were double-labelled by Annexin-V/PI after they were treated with
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different concentrations of rubropunctatin under the conditions with or without light
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irradiation. The Annexin-V and PI positive cells were defined as late
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apoptotic/necrotic stage. As shown in Figure 4, the untreated cells were primarily
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Annexin-V and PI negative, indicating that they were viable and not undergoing
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apoptosis either in the absence or presence of light irradiation. After treatment with
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rubropunctatin in the dark or under light irradiation, rubropunctatin produced a
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dose-dependent increase in the HeLa necrotic population and a decrease in viable
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population, and induced HeLa cells from early apoptotic stage into late
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apoptotic/necrotic stage. Compared with the treatment in the dark, the results showed
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that rubropunctatin plus light marginally induces cell late apoptosis/necrosis (such as
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38.6% vs 30.2% at 120 µM), indicating that the cytotoxic effect of rubropunctatin on
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HeLa cells was boosted by the light irradiation.
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Rubropunctatin-induced Loss of ∆Ψm in HeLa Cells under the Conditions with
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or without Light Irradiation. The loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (∆Ψm)
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is regarded as a limiting factor in the induction of apoptosis by the intrinsic pathway.25
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To determine whether rubropunctatin induced damage of the mitochondrial function
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with light irradiation, we determined ∆Ψm by using JC-1 staining. The absolute
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red/green JC-1 intensity ratio (FL1/FL2) was measured.
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quantitative analysis of mitochondrial membrane depolarization by flow cytometry
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showed that the cellular ∆Ψm was decreased after exposure of HeLa cells to
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rubropunctatin under the conditions with or without light irradiation. The negative
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control HeLa cells were with higher potentials and theratio of red/green JC-1
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fluorescence was above 1.3. In the positive control, CCCP was used as an inducer to
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As shown in Table 4,
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decrease the mitochondrial membrane potential and the determined FL1/FL2 was 0.87.
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After HeLa cells were exposed to 30 or 60 µM rubropunctatin for 24 h, it was noted
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that ∆Ψm did not change ether in the dark or under light irradiation, indicating that the
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loss of ∆Ψm possibly reached a maximum at 30 µM. These results indicated that
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rubropunctatin induced apoptosis via the mitochondrial pathway. The cytotoxic effect
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of rubropunctatin on HeLa cells was boosted by the light irradiation, but
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mitochondrial membrane potential did not change.
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Induction of the Activation of Caspase-3, -8 and -9 by Rubropunctatin. Treatment
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of HeLa cells with rubropunctatin (30 and 60 µM) resulted in a dose-dependent
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increase in the activities of caspase-3, -8 and -9 either in the dark or under light
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irradiation (Figure 5). Compared with the treatment in the dark, the data under the
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conditions with light irradiation showed an obvious increase of the activity of
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caspase-3, -8 and -9, further indicating that the combination of rubropunctatin
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treatment and light irradiation was more effective than treatment alone with the drug
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to induce cell apoptosis.
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The mitochondrial pathway plays an essential role for cell apoptosis, in which
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caspase-3, -8 and -9 are involved. Our experimental data demonstrated that
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rubropunctatin treatment led to the activation of caspase-3, -8 and -9. These results
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indicated that rubropunctatin induced cell apoptosis via the mitochondrial pathway.
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Production of Cellular ROS induced by Rubropunctatin under Conditions with
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or without Light Irradiation. The interaction of the photosensitisers with cancer
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cells can induce oxidative stress by enhancing the production of intracellular ROS
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over the cellular antioxidant defenses. To investigate the effect of rubropunctatin on
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the production of intracellular ROS, the treated cells were quantified by determining
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the percentage of cells with increased green fluorescence in a flow cytometer. Under
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the conditions without light irradiation the determined ROS levels produced in the
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Hela cells treated by rubropunctatin with lower concentrations were in the same order
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of magnitude with the blank group of rubropunctatin untreated cells. It is evident from
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the flow cytometric analysis that the treatment of rubropunctatin raised the level of
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intracellular ROS only at the high concentration of 90µM in the absence of irradiation.
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However, the intracellular ROS level in presence of light irradiation increased even at
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the lower rubropunctatin concentrations, which was toxic enough to augment the
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apoptotic cell death by damaging mitochondrial membrane integrity. Table 5 showed
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an obvious elevation of the ROS production in the rubropunctatin treated cells under
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the conditions with light irradiation compared to without irradiation. The experimental
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data of the intracellular ROS level treated by rubropunctatin under conditions with
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light irradiation or without light irradiation were consistent with the reported data
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regarding the cytotoxic activities against HeLa cells mentioned above.
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In this work, we found the photochemical properties of rubropunctatin and reported
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the fact that light irradiation with wavelength 597-622nm remarkably strengthened its
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cytotoxic activities against human cervical carcinoma HeLa cells. The cytotoxicity of
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rubropunctatin on various human cervical carcinoma cells (Siha, Caski, C33A) was
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also systematically evaluated in our experiments, and the tendency of the cytotoxicity
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under the conditions with irradiation over that without irradiation was in the same
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manner as Hela cells. Photodynamic therapy is believed to cause cell damage via the
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production of ROS and subsequently to induce apoptotic signaling via the
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mitochondrial pathway. Rubropunctatin increased intracellular ROS generation and
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decreased mitochondrial membrane potential. These results suggest that the anticancer
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effect of rubropunctatin was probably due to the modulation of cell signaling and
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intracellular ROS generation. The treatment of rubropunctatin under the conditions
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with light irradiation promoted the induction of Hela cells into late apoptosis/necrosis
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phase. Activation of caspase 8 and 9 in the upstream resulted in the activation of
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caspase 3 in the downstream and in the end speeded up cell apoptosis. In order to
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develop anticancer effects of rubropunctatin, it is essential to further understand the
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precise mechanism of cytotoxic activities of rubropunctatin in the presence of light
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irradiation.
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The photochemical reaction of rubropunctain was studied by HPLC-MS (data not
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shown).
Rubropunctain
is a
natural azaphilone compound
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microbiological metabolite, which has a typical structure with multiple rings
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involving multiple conjugated double bonds and mixed oxygen atoms. After light
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irradiation, part of rubropunctain was degradated and some new compounds with
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higher polarity were produced. The hydroxyl free radicals and hydrogen free radiacals
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produced from RH (hydrogen donor) under the conditions with light irradiation could
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easily attack the conjugating double bands in the rubropunctain molaculars. When
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rubropunctain in the water solution was radiated with light, colour fading was
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isolated
from
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observed, which was due to the conjugate structure’s damage. It is required to further
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explore the photochemical reaction mechanism of rubropunctain in the presence of
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light irradiation.
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AUTHOR INFORMATION
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Corresponding Authors
408
*Fax:
409
[email protected] (Y. Zheng)
410
Fax: +86-591-22866234 ; Tel: +86-591-22866227; E-mail:
[email protected] (H.
411
Chen)
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Notes
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The authors declare no competing financial interest.
414
Acknowledgment
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This work was supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China (No.
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J1103303),
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2012J05155), Marine Public Welfare Research Project of China (201205022), and the
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Technology Development Foundation of Fuzhou University (Project Numbers
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2011-XY-7 and 2013-XQ-9).
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REFERENCES
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Tel:
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+86-591-83720772;
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E-mail:
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Table 1. The influence of light irradiation with different wavelengths on the light chemical reaction of rubropunctatin Irradiation condition
wavelength
Degradation Rate of rubropunctain, %
red light
622-770nm
64.5
orange light
597-622nm
68.8
yellow light
577-597nm
58.4
green light
492-577nm
57.2
blue light
455-492nm
16.3
484
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Table 2. Cytotoxicity of rubropunctatin and Taxol on HeLa and H8 cells
Cells treated with rubropunctatin for different time (h)
IC50 of rubropunctatin (µmol/L)
IC50 of Taxol (µmol/L)
Without Light Irradiation
With Light Irradiation
Without Light Irradiation
With Light Irradiation
HeLa (4h)
>1000
>1000
>1000
>1000
HeLa (12h)
146.61±2.45
44.19±2.86
73.31±2.23
76.86±2.54
HeLa (24h)
93.71±1.96
24.02±2.17
44.32±3.84
42.71±4.31
H8 (24h)
>300
>300
120.83±4.52
124.39±5.03
486
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Table 3. DNA flow cytometric analysis of cell cycle distribution.a
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Condition without light irradiation with light irradiation
Cell
Concentration (µM) Control
3
30
60
90
Sub-G1
1.64±0.02
1.98±0.04*
1.91±0.01*
1.96±0.03*
2.6±0.03**
6.4±0.01**
G0/G1
63.95±5.21
63.83±3.43
65.82±5.42
61.26±6.54
59.1±7.54*
60.95±3.54*
S
9.94±0.89
9.22±0.45
9.88±0.52
8.92±0.23*
9.30±0.53
10.17±0.48
Cycle
120
G2/M
24.47±1.23
24.97±1.14
22.39±1.42
27.86±0.95*
29.00±0.92*
22.48±1.42*
Sub-G1
2.11±0.03
3.25±0.01**
5.03±0.03**
8.21±0.06**
12.2±1.03**
14.09±1.40**
G0/G1
63.79±5.06
63.43±3.40
57.98±5.03*
56.2±5.04**
52.1±4.05**
47.36±6.95**
S
10.66±1.03
10.67±1.34
11.33±2.01
10.91±1.24
10.23±0.89
9.3±0.98*
G2/M
23.44±1.04
22.65±1.93
25.66±1.02*
24.68±1.29
25.47±2.01*
29.25±2.89**
488
a
489
the respective controls for each experimental test condition was assessed using Student’s unpaired
490
t test, with *p < 0.05 or **p < 0.01 being regarded as statistically significant.
Each value represents the mean ± SD of three separate experiments. A significant difference from
491
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
492
Table 4. Effects of rubropunctatin on mitochondrial membrane potential (∆Ψm) of
493
Hela cells without or with light irradiationa. Condition
Concentration(µM) b
without light irradiation with light irradiation
CCCP control 30 60 CCCPb control 30 60
FL2/FL1 0.87±0.09** 1.37±0.12 0.86±0.05** 0.87±0.04** 0.78±0.02** 1.41±0.11 0.94±0.06** 0.94±0.05**
494
a
495
the respective controls for each experimental test condition was assessed using Student’s unpaired
496
t test, with *p