4.6 Article

Galangin, a Flavonoid from Lesser Galangal, Induced Apoptosis via p53-Dependent Pathway in Ovarian Cancer Cells

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 25, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules25071579

Keywords

apoptosis; galangin; antioxidants; ovarian cancer; western blot; flavonoid

Funding

  1. NIH from the National Center for Research Resources [P20RR016477]
  2. National Institute for General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) [P20GM103434]
  3. National Key R&D Program of China [2016YFD0401503]
  4. NIGMS, a component of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) [P20GM104932]
  5. COBRE grant [GM102488/RR032138]
  6. ARIA S10 [RR020866]
  7. FORTESSA S10 [OD016165]

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Among women worldwide, ovarian cancer is one of the most dangerous cancers. Patients undergoing platinum-based chemotherapy might get adverse side effects and develop resistance to drugs. In recent years, natural compounds have aroused growing attention in cancer treatment. Galangin inhibited the growth of two cell lines, A2780/CP70 and OVCAR-3, more strongly than the growth of a normal ovarian cell line, IOSE 364. The IC50 values of galangin on proliferation of A2780/CP70, OVCAR-3 and IOSE 364 cells were 42.3, 34.5, and 131.3 mu M, respectively. Flow cytometry analysis indicated that galangin preferentially induced apoptosis in both ovarian cancer cells with respect to normal ovarian cells. Galangin treatment increased the level of cleaved caspase-3 and -7 via the p53-dependent intrinsic apoptotic pathway by up-regulating Bax protein and via the p53-dependent extrinsic apoptotic pathway by up-regulating DR5 protein. By down-regulating the level of p53 with 20 mu M pifithrin-alpha (PFT-alpha), the apoptotic rates of OVCAR-3 cells induced by galangin treatment (40 mu M) were significantly decreased from 18.2% to 10.2%, indicating that p53 is a key regulatory protein in galangin-induced apoptosis in ovarian cancer cells. Although galangin up-regulated the expression of p21, it had little effect on the cell cycle of the two ovarian cancer cell lines. Furthermore, the levels of phosphorylated Akt and phosphorylated p70S6K were decreased through galangin treatment, suggesting that the Akt/p70S6K pathways might be involved in the apoptosis. Our results suggested that galangin is selective against cancer cells and can be used for the treatment of platinum-resistant ovarian cancers in humans.

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