Journal of Applied Biomaterials & Functional Materials (Apr 2022)

Cetylpyridinium chloride inhibits human breast tumor cells growth in a no-selective way

  • Claudia María García-Cuellar,
  • Rene Hernández-Delgadillo,
  • Juan Manuel Solis-Soto,
  • Irene Meester,
  • Yesennia Sánchez-Pérez,
  • Sergio Eduardo Nakagoshi-Cepeda,
  • María Argelia Akemi Nakagoshi-Cepeda,
  • Shankararaman Chellam,
  • Claudio Cabral-Romero

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/22808000221092157
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20

Abstract

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Objective: Analyze the antitumor capacity of cetylpyridinium chloride (CPC) on human breast tumor cells, and the possible action mechanism. Material and methods: The human breast tumor cells MCF-7 and no-tumor breast cells MCF-10A were exposed to CPC under various condition (concentration and duration). Cell viability was measured with MTT assay, the LIVE/DEAD assay, and fluorescence microscopy. Membrane permeability after CPC exposure was evaluated by Calcein AM assay, mitochondrial morphology with a MitoView staining, and genotoxicity with the comet assay and fluorescence microscopy. Results: CPC was cytotoxic to both MCF-7 and MCF-10A as of a 24-h exposure to 0.1 µM. Cytotoxicity was dose-dependent and reached 91% for MCF-7 and 78% for MCF-10A after a 24-h exposure to 100 µM CPC, which outperformed the positive control doxorubicin in effectiveness and selectivity. The LD50 of CPC on was 6 µM for MCF-7 and 8 µM for MCF-10A, yielding a selectivity index of 1.41. A time response analysis revealed 64% dead cells after only 5 min of exposure to 100 µM CPC. With respect to the action mechanisms, the comet assay did not reveal genome fragmentation. On the other hand, membrane damage was dose-dependent and may also affect mitochondrial morphology. Conclusion: Cetylpyridinium chloride inhibits MCF-7 cell growing in a non-selective way as of 5 min of exposure. The action mechanism of CPC on tumor cells involves cell membrane damage without change neither mitochondrial morphology nor genotoxicity.