Login / Signup

Fruit Extract of Sechium chinantlense (Lira & F. Chiang) Induces Apoptosis in the Human Cervical Cancer HeLa Cell Line.

Ana Rocío Rivera-MartínezItzen Aguiñiga-SánchezJorge Cadena-IñiguezIsabel Soto-CruzAlberto Monroy-GarcíaGuadalupe Gómez-GarcíaEdgar Ledesma-MartínezBenny Weiss-SteiderEdelmiro Santiago-Osorio
Published in: Nutrients (2023)
Sechium edule (Cucurbitaceae) is a commercial species of chayote and is just one of several species in the genus Sechium, whose extracts inhibit proliferation in tumor cell lines. The capacity of the wild species Sechium chinantlense (SCH) as an antitumor agent is unknown, as is the mechanism of action. In the present study, HeLa cervical cancer and HaCaT normal cell lines were treated with SCH and cell proliferation was inhibited in both cell lines in a dose-dependent manner similar to the effect of the antineoplastic agent cisplatin (Cis). Additionally, SCH arrested cell cycle progression but only in HeLa cells and induced apoptosis, as shown by phosphatidylserine translocation and caspase-3 activation, while Cis did so in both cell lines. Exploration of the mechanism of action of SCH in HeLa cells suggests that apoptosis was mediated by the intrinsic signaling pathway since there was no activation of caspase-8, but there was a release of cytochrome-c. These findings suggest that the SCH extract has the potential to selectively kill tumor cells by promoting apoptosis, without harming nontumor cells.
Keyphrases
  • induced apoptosis
  • cell cycle arrest
  • signaling pathway
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress
  • pi k akt
  • oxidative stress
  • cell death
  • cell cycle
  • cell proliferation
  • epithelial mesenchymal transition
  • endothelial cells