Tannic acid-stabilized gold nano-particles are superior to native tannic acid in inducing ROS-dependent mitochondrial apoptosis in colorectal carcinoma cells via the p53/AKT axis.
Sayoni NagKrishnendu MannaKrishna Das SahaPublished in: RSC advances (2019)
Gold nanoparticle formulated tannic acid (AuNP-TA) was synthesized, and its anticancer activity was compared to that of free tannic acid (TA). The half maximal inhibitory concentration (IC 50 ) was reduced by half when cell lines were treated with AuNP-TA as compared to IC 50 values upon free TA treatment. Both showed better cytotoxic activity in HCT116 cell line as compared to MCF7 and HepG2. AuNP-TA induced death of HCT116 cells was associated with characteristic apoptotic changes. At the same treatment dose, AuNP-TA generated more ROS, caused a more extensive DNA damage and promoted higher expression of p53 and p21 than TA. Treatment with AuNP-TA regulated generation of p53 and ROS bi-directionally. Binding studies showed that TA lowered the expression of Akt, which inhibited the survival of colon cancer cells. Also, cell cycle arrest at the G2/M phase, enhanced expression of caspase-3/9, Bak, and Bax, loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, and enhanced level of cytosolic cytochrome c were observed in AuNP-TA treated HCT116 cells. Thus, AuNP-TA is more efficient than TA in inducing apoptotic cell death of HCT116 cells via the ROS/P53/Akt axis.