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Targeting AKT/mTOR and Bcl-2 for Autophagic and Apoptosis Cell Death in Lung Cancer: Novel Activity of a Polyphenol Compound
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Metadata
Document Title
Targeting AKT/mTOR and Bcl-2 for Autophagic and Apoptosis Cell Death in Lung Cancer: Novel Activity of a Polyphenol Compound
Author
Tungsukruthai S, Reamtong O, Roytrakul S, Sukrong S, Vinayanwattikun C, Chanvorachote P
Name from Authors Collection
Affiliations
Chulalongkorn University; Chulalongkorn University; Mahidol University; National Science & Technology Development Agency - Thailand; National Center Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology (BIOTEC); Chulalongkorn University; Chulalongkorn University; Chulalongkorn University
Type
Article
Source Title
ANTIOXIDANTS
Year
2021
Volume
10
Issue
4
Page
-
Open Access
gold, Green Published
Publisher
MDPI
DOI
10.3390/antiox10040534
Format
Abstract
Autophagic cell death (ACD) is an alternative death mechanism in resistant malignant cancer cells. In this study, we demonstrated how polyphenol stilbene compound PE5 exhibits potent ACD-promoting activity in lung cancer cells that may offer an opportunity for novel cancer treatment. Cell death caused by PE5 was found to be concomitant with dramatic autophagy induction, as indicated by acidic vesicle staining, autophagosome, and the LC3 conversion. We further confirmed that the main death induction caused by PE5 was via ACD, since the co-treatment with an autophagy inhibitor could reverse PE5-mediated cell death. Furthermore, the defined mechanism of action and upstream regulatory signals were identified using proteomic analysis. Time-dependent proteomic analysis showed that PE5 affected 2142 and 1996 proteins after 12 and 24 h of treatment, respectively. The crosstalk network comprising 128 proteins that control apoptosis and 25 proteins involved in autophagy was identified. Protein-protein interaction analysis further indicated that the induction of ACD was via AKT/mTOR and Bcl-2 suppression. Western blot analysis confirmed that the active forms of AKT, mTOR, and Bcl-2 were decreased in PE5-treated cells. Taken together, we demonstrated the novel mechanism of PE5 in shifting autophagy toward cell death induction by targeting AKT/mTOR and Bcl-2 suppression.
Keyword
Akt | Apoptosis | Autophagic cell death | Autophagy | Bcl-2 | lung cancer | mTOR | Polyphenol | Proteomics | Stilbene compounds
Industrial Classification
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 1
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 2
Funding Sponsor
Chulalongkorn University [CU_GR_62_63_33_05]; Chulalongkorn University Fund
License
CC BY
Rights
Authors
Publication Source
WOS