Antitumor Effect of Iscador on Breast Cancer Cell Lines with Different Metastatic Potential.
Bozhil RobevIvan IlievIana TsonevaAlbena MomchilovaAlexandrina NeshevaAneliya KostadinovaGalya StanevaBiliana NikolovaPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2023)
Studies were performed for the first time on the effect of Iscador Qu and Iscador M on phototoxicity, cytotoxicity, antiproliferative activity, changes in ξ-potential of cells, membrane lipid order, actin cytoskeleton organization and migration on three breast cancer lines with different metastatic potential: MCF10A (control), MCF-7 (low metastatic) and MDA-MB231 (high metastatic) cells. The tested Iscador Qu and M did not show any phototoxicity. The antiproliferative effect of Iscador species appeared to be dose-dependent and was related to the metastatic potential of the tested cell lines. A higher selectivity index was obtained for Iscador Qu and M towards the low metastatic MCF-7 cell line compared to the high metastatic MDA-MB-231. Iscador Qu demonstrated higher selectivity for both cancer cell lines compared to Iscador M. The malignant cell lines exhibited a decrease in fibril number and thickness regardless of the type of Iscador used. The strongest effect on migration potential was observed for the low metastatic cancer cell line MCF-7 after Iscador treatment. Both Iscador species induced a slight increase in the percentage of cells in early apoptosis for the low and high metastatic cell lines, MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231, unlike control cells. Changes in the zeta potential and membrane lipid order were observed for the low metastatic MCF-7 cell line in contrast to the high metastatic MDA-MB-231 cells. The presented results reveal a higher potential of Iscador as an antitumor agent for the low metastatic cancer cell line MCF-7 compared to the high metastatic one. Iscador Qu appears to be more potent compared to Iscador M, but at this point, the exact mechanism of action is still unclear and needs further investigations.
Keyphrases
- squamous cell carcinoma
- cell cycle arrest
- small cell lung cancer
- breast cancer cells
- induced apoptosis
- cell death
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- risk assessment
- pi k akt
- papillary thyroid
- signaling pathway
- magnetic resonance
- gene expression
- cell proliferation
- young adults
- cell migration
- combination therapy
- density functional theory
- drug induced