Author/Authors :
Kharat, Kiran R. Center for Advanced facility for Life Sciences - Deogiri College - Aurangabad, India , Kharat, Arun S. School of Life Sciences - Jawaharlal Nehru University - New Delhi, India
Abstract :
Calotropis gigantea (family: Asclepiadaceae)
has been known to contain cardiac glycosides. The C. gigantea
extracts have been reported as cytotoxic to a few cancer cell
lines. The present study was designed to examine the effect of
Calotropis gigantea methanolic extract (CGME) on the growth
and apoptosis in human breast carcinoma cell line (MCF-7 cells).
Methods: The study was conducted in Aurangabad (India) from
16 February to 10 June 2015. CGME treated MCF-7 cells were
analyzed for growth inhibition and apoptosis. The exhibition of
phosphatidylserine was analyzed with the Annexin-V Fluorescein
isothiocyanate flow cytometry (FITC) method. Accumulated
poly-caspases were determined with carboxyfluorescein polycaspase
assay, Apo-BrdU™ tunnel assay for DNA fragmentation
and pro/anti-apoptotic gene expression with real-time polymerase
chain reaction. The high-performance liquid chromatography
analysis indicated the presence of two unknown cardenolides
along with known cardenolides such as calactin, calatropagenin,
usharin, afroside, calatoxin, and gamphoside. The Kruskal-
Wallis and Wilcoxon tests (GraphPad Prism version 7.0) were
used for statistical analyses.
Results: Upon treatment with 40 μg/ml CGME, about 56.9%
of the cell population underwent apoptosis. Compared to
paclitaxel, the accumulation of active caspases in CGME treated
with MCF-7 cells was found to be dose-dependent, whereas
the G2/M cell cycle arrest was time-dependent. The Apo-
BrdU™ tunnel assay confirmed that CGME treatment caused
DNA fragmentation and RT-PCR analyses indicated elevated
transcription for pro-apoptotic gene expression. Kruskal-
Wallis test results were significant; Bcl-2 (P=0.00193), Bak-1
(P=0.00021), and Bax (P=0.0019).
Conclusion: CGME treatment caused the accumulation of
phosphatidylserine on the cell membrane, recruitment of polycaspases,
DNA fragmentation, and enhanced transcription of
pro-apoptotic gene expression.