Molecular mechanism of diallyl disulfide in cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in HCT-116 colon cancer cells.
Cuvinte cheie
Abstract
Diallyl disulfide (DADS) is the most prevalent oil-soluble sulfur compound in garlic and inhibits cell proliferation in many cancer cell lines. Here we examined DADS cytotoxicity in a redox-mediated process, involving reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. In the present study, p53-independent cell cycle arrest at G2/M phase was observed with DADS treatment, along with time-dependent increase of cyclin B1. In addition, apoptosis was also observed upon 24-h DADS treatment accompanied by activation of p53. In HCT-116 cells, DADS application induced a dose-dependent increase and time-dependent changes in ROS production. Scavenging of DADS-induced ROS by N-acetyl cysteine or reduced glutathione inhibited cell cycle arrest, apoptosis and p53 activation by DADS. These results suggest that ROS trigger the DADS-induced cell cycle arrest and apoptosis and that ROS are involved in stress-induced signaling upstream of p53 activation. Transfection of p53 small interfering RNA prevents the accumulation of cleaved poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase and sub-G1 cell population by 65% and 35%, respectively. Moreover, DADS-induced apoptosis was also prevented by treatment with oligomycin, which is known to prevent p53-dependent apoptosis by reducing ROS levels in mitochondria. These results suggest that mitochondrial ROS may serve as second messengers in DADS-induced apoptosis, which requires activation of p53.