Bioactive peptide of Cicer arietinum L. induces apoptosis in human endometrial cancer via DNA fragmentation and cell cycle arrest.
Neha GuptaSameer Suresh BhagyawantPublished in: 3 Biotech (2021)
Chickpea seed proteins are alleged source of nutraceuticals. These seed proteins were subjected to different proteases to produce peptides. The efficacy of these peptides was confirmed using six diverse human cancer cell lines (PA-1, Ishikawa cells, A549, MCF-7, HepG2, MDA-MB-231). Alcalase generated peptides exhibited the highest antagonistic inhibition of Ishikawa cells. Flow cytometric analysis revealed that chickpea peptide induced S and G2 phase arrest of cell cycle in a dose dependent manner. DNA fragmentation and apoptosis occurred by down regulation of Bcl-2 expression, upregulation of Bax expression and promotion of caspase-3 initiation. Chickpea peptides ascertain potential antiproliferative molecule that can be deployed in cancer treatment regimes.
Keyphrases
- cell cycle arrest
- cell death
- cell cycle
- pi k akt
- poor prognosis
- endometrial cancer
- induced apoptosis
- cell proliferation
- endothelial cells
- signaling pathway
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- circulating tumor
- amino acid
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- cell free
- high glucose
- oxidative stress
- single molecule
- diabetic rats
- pluripotent stem cells
- long non coding rna
- binding protein
- squamous cell carcinoma
- young adults
- papillary thyroid
- risk assessment
- childhood cancer