(−)-Oleocanthal induces death preferentially in tumor hematopoietic cells through caspase dependent and independent mechanisms
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Pastorio, Chiara; Torres Rusillo, Sara; Jiménez López, M. Carmen; Iáñez García, Inmaculada; Molina Pineda Infantas, Ignacio JesúsEditorial
Royal Society of Chemistry
Fecha
2022-10-13Referencia bibliográfica
Food Funct., 2022,13, 11334-11341. DOI: [10.1039/d2fo01222g]
Patrocinador
Universidad de Granada-Junta de Andalucia A-CTS-480-UGR18 B.CTS.690.UGR20; Action for AT, United Kingdom charity AAT-8GRA02Resumen
Olive oil is a key component of the highly cardiovascular protective Mediterranean diet. (−)-Oleocanthal
(OLC) is one of the most interesting phenolics present in virgin olive oil, and is formed from secoiridoid
ligustroside during the processing of olives to yield the oil. Anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidant properties
were identified shortly after OLC isolation, followed by the discovery of anti-tumor activities in a few nonhematopoietic
cell lineages. Because of the scarcity of tissues potentially targeted by OLC analyzed so far
and the unresolved mechanism(s) for OLC anti-tumor properties, we used a panel of 17 cell lines belonging
to 11 tissue lineages to carry out a detailed examination of targets and pathways leading to cell growth
inhibition and death. We found that OLC inhibits cell proliferation and induces apoptotic death as revealed
by sub-G1 cell cycle analyses and Annexin-V staining in all lineages analyzed except lung carcinoma cell
lines. Hematopoietic tumor cell lines, untested until now, were the most sensitive to OLC treatment,
whereas non-transformed cells were significantly resistant to cell death. The specificity of OLC-mediated
caspase activation was confirmed by blocking experiments and the use of transfectants overexpressing
anti apoptotic genes. OLC triggers typical mediators of the intrinsic apoptotic pathway such as production
of reactive oxygen species and mitochondrial membrane depolarization (Δψm). Complete blockade of
caspases, however, did not result in parallel abrogation of Annexin-V staining, thus suggesting that
complex mechanisms are involved in triggering OLC-mediated cell death. Our results demonstrate that
OLC preferentially targets hematopoietic tumor cell lines and support that cell death is mediated by
caspase-dependent and independent mechanisms.





