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Journal ArticleDOI

Flavonoids Inhibit Cell Growth and Induce Apoptosis in B16 Melanoma 4A5 Cells

TLDR
The results demonstrate that isoliquiritigenin and butein inhibit cell proliferation and induce apoptosis in B16 melanoma cells and it seems that the pathway by which the chalcones induce apoptose may be independent of p53 and dependent on proteins of the Bcl-2 family.
Abstract
We investigated the growth inhibitory activity of several flavonoids, including apigenin, luteolin, kaempherol, quercetin, butein, isoliquiritigenin, naringenin, genistein, and daizein against B16 mouse melanoma 4A5 cells. Isoliquiritigenin and butein, belonging to the chalcone group, markedly suppressed the growth of B16 melanoma cells and induced cell death. The other flavonoids tested showed little growth inhibitory activity and scarcely caused cell death. In cells treated with isoliquiritigenin or butein, condensation of nuclei and fragmentation of nuclear DNA, which are typical phenomena of apoptosis, were observed by Hoechst 33258 staining and by agarose gel electrophoresis of DNA. Flowcytometric analysis showed that isoliquiritigenin and butein increased the proportion of hypodiploid cells in the population of B16 melanoma cells. These results demonstrate that isoliquiritigenin and butein inhibit cell proliferation and induce apoptosis in B16 melanoma cells. Extracellular glucose decreased the proportion of hypodiploid cells that appeared as a result of isoliquiritigenin treatment. p53 was not detected in cells treated with either of these chalcones, however, protein of the Bcl-2 family were detected. The level of expression of Bax in cells treated with either of these chalcones was markedly elevated and the level of Bcl-XL decreased slightly. Isoliquiritigenin did not affect Bcl-2 expression, but butein down-regulated Bcl-2 expression. From these results, it seems that the pathway by which the chalcones induce apoptosis may be independent of p53 and dependent on proteins of the Bcl-2 family. It was supposed that isoliquiritigenin induces apoptosis in B16 cells by a mechanism involving inhibition of glucose transmembrane transport and promotion of Bax expression. On the other hand, it was suggested that butein induces apoptosis via down-regulation of Bcl-2 expression and promotion of Bax expression. This mechanism differs from the isoliquiritigenin induction pathway.

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Citations
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Review of Pharmacological Effects of Glycyrrhiza sp. and its Bioactive Compounds

TL;DR: This review summarizes the phytochemical, pharmacological and pharmacokinetics data, together with the clinical and adverse effects of licorice and its bioactive components.
Journal ArticleDOI

Flavonoids: Promising anticancer agents

TL;DR: Results from laboratory studies, epidemiological investigations, and human clinical trials indicate that flavonoids have important effects on cancer chemoprevention and chemotherapy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Apigenin: A Promising Molecule for Cancer Prevention

TL;DR: It has been suggested that apigenin may be protective in other diseases that are affected by oxidative process, such as cardiovascular and neurological disorders, although more research needs to be conducted in this regard.
Journal ArticleDOI

Apigenin and cancer chemoprevention: Progress, potential and promise (Review)

TL;DR: Appigenin has been shown to possess remarkable anti-inflammatory, antioxidant and anti-carcinogenic properties, and its considerable potential for development as a cancer chemopreventive agent is evaluated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Flavonoids: A Versatile Source of Anticancer Drugs

TL;DR: This review focuses on the anticancer activity of flavonoids as well as their molecular mechanisms, including the treatment of mammary and prostate cancer and highlights some advanced derivatives of Flavonoids, which play an important role against cancer.
References
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Journal Article

The Cell Cycle Related Differences in Susceptibility of HL-60 Cells to Apoptosis Induced by Various Antitumor Agents

TL;DR: Cell cycle related difference in susceptibility to apoptosis may be a reflection of both the severity of the lesion induced by a given drug and the ability of the cells to repair that lesion; both can vary depending on the cell cycle phase.
Journal ArticleDOI

Involvement of microtubules in the regulation of Bcl2 phosphorylation and apoptosis through cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase.

TL;DR: The microtubule-damaging drugs paclitaxel, vincristine, and vinblastine induced Bcl2 hyperphosphorylation and apoptosis in MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cells and reduced B cl2-Bax dimerization, suggesting that there may be a signaling cascade induced by agents that disrupt or damage the cytoskeleton that is distinct from but related to the cellular response to DNA damage.
Journal Article

Induction of apoptosis by quercetin: involvement of heat shock protein.

TL;DR: It is suggested that quercetin displays antitumor activity by triggering apoptosis and that HSP70 may affect quERCetin-induced apoptosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Antiproliferative potency of structurally distinct dietary flavonoids on human colon cancer cells

TL;DR: Of the two most potent flavonoids, quercetin and genistein, the effect was found to be dose-dependent and chromatin condensation, an indication of apoptosis, was noticed and the chemical instability did not correlate with the antiproliferative potency, although it may contribute to the antiprologative effect.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inhibition of proliferation of estrogen receptor-positive MCF-7 human breast cancer cells by flavonoids in the presence and absence of excess estrogen

TL;DR: Of the flavonoids tested, only the inhibition of cell proliferation by genistein was reversed with the addition of excess, competing estrogen, and Baicalein, galangin, hesperetin, naringenin and quercetin apparently exert their antiproliferative activity via some other mechanism.
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