Affiliation:
1. Department of Experimental Medicine and Biotechnology , Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research , Chandigarh , India
2. Department of Pharmacology , Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research , Chandigarh , India
3. Department of General Surgery , Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research , Chandigarh , India
Abstract
Abstract
Objectives
Aspirin is an anti-inflammatory drug commonly used as an analgesic and in cardiovascular disorders. However, many studies have highlighted its anti-cancer properties, especially in colorectal, lung, head and neck, and breast cancers. In this work, we tried to study the effect of aspirin on the TNF-α-mediated cell survival and death pathways in two cell lines representing two different subtypes of breast cancer. TNF-α-mediated stimulation of a cell can result in its proliferation via the NF-κB pathway or its death via either apoptosis or a programmed form of necrosis called necroptosis. The latter is believed to come into the picture only when apoptosis is inhibited.
Methods
In this work, we studied the effect of aspirin on the TNF-α-mediated cell survival pathway and observed a decrease in expression of the NF-κB pathway regulators, its nuclear translocation, and phosphorylation in a dose-dependent manner. The effect of aspirin on the TNF-α-mediated cell death showed significant cytotoxicity at the higher doses (5–20 mM) of aspirin in both the breast cancer cell lines. The effect of aspirin on necroptosis was investigated after stimulating the cells with TNF-α and inhibiting apoptosis using Z-VAD-FMK.
Results
Though no significant effect was noted in breast cancer cell lines, the above protocol successfully induced necroptosis in L929, i.e., a positive control cell line for necroptosis having an intact necroptosis machinery. Even when combined with the chemotherapeutic drugs, the above regime failed to induce any significant necroptosis in breast cancer cells but was found effective in L929.
Conclusions
Overall, the findings show that while aspirin has the potential to inhibit the TNF-α-mediated cell survival pathway, it does not help sensitize breast cancer cells to necroptotic cell death induction.
Subject
Drug Discovery,Pharmacology,General Medicine,Physiology
Reference54 articles.
1. Landau, E. From a Tree, a “Miracle” Called Aspirin. Atlanta, Georgia, United States: CNN Health: Matters of the Heart; 2010.
2. Cao, Y, Tan, A. Aspirin might reduce the incidence of breast cancer: an updated meta-analysis of 38 observational studies. Medicine 2020;99:1–13. https://doi.org/10.1097/md.0000000000021917.
3. Kumar, P, Nagarajan, A, Uchil, PD. Analysis of cell viability by the MTT assay. Cold Spr Harbor Prot 2018;2018:PDB. prot095505. https://doi.org/10.1101/pdb.prot095505.
4. Livak, KJ, Schmittgen, TD. Analysis of relative gene expression data using real-time quantitative PCR and the 2−ΔΔCT method. Methods 2001;25:402–8. https://doi.org/10.1006/meth.2001.1262.
5. Fitzpatrick, M. Measuring cell fluorescence using ImageJ. The Open Lab Book 2014.