International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jun 2024)

Arsenic Nanoparticles Trigger Apoptosis via <i>Anoikis</i> Induction in OECM-1 Cells

  • Alejandra A. Covarrubias,
  • Mauricio Reyna-Jeldes,
  • Seidy Pedroso-Santana,
  • Sabrina Marín,
  • Carolina Madero-Mendoza,
  • Cecilia Demergasso,
  • Claudio Coddou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms25126723
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 12
p. 6723

Abstract

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Arsenic compounds have been used as therapeutic alternatives for several diseases including cancer. In the following work, we obtained arsenic nanoparticles (AsNPs) produced by an anaerobic bacterium from the Salar de Ascotán, in northern Chile, and evaluated their effects on the human oral squamous carcinoma cell line OECM-1. Resazurin reduction assays were carried out on these cells using 1–100 µM of AsNPs, finding a concentration-dependent reduction in cell viability that was not observed for the non-tumoral gastric mucosa-derived cell line GES-1. To establish if these effects were associated with apoptosis induction, markers like Bcl2, Bax, and cleaved caspase 3 were analyzed via Western blot, executor caspases 3/7 via luminometry, and DNA fragmentation was analyzed by TUNEL assay, using 100 µM cisplatin as a positive control. OECM-1 cells treated with AsNPs showed an induction of both extrinsic and intrinsic apoptotic pathways, which can be explained by a significant decrease in P-Akt/Akt and P-ERK/ERK relative protein ratios, and an increase in both PTEN and p53 mRNA levels and Bit-1 relative protein levels. These results suggest a prospective mechanism of action for AsNPs that involves a potential interaction with extracellular matrix (ECM) components that reduces cell attachment and subsequently triggers anoikis, an anchorage-dependent type of apoptosis.

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