Marine Drugs (Apr 2023)

Chemomodulatory Effect of the Marine-Derived Metabolite “Terrein” on the Anticancer Properties of Gemcitabine in Colorectal Cancer Cells

  • Reham Khaled Abuhijjleh,
  • Dalia Yousef Al Saeedy,
  • Naglaa S. Ashmawy,
  • Ahmed E. Gouda,
  • Sameh S. Elhady,
  • Ahmed Mohamed Al-Abd

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/md21050271
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 5
p. 271

Abstract

Read online

Background: Terrein (Terr) is a bioactive marine secondary metabolite that possesses antiproliferative/cytotoxic properties by interrupting various molecular pathways. Gemcitabine (GCB) is an anticancer drug used to treat several types of tumors such as colorectal cancer; however, it suffers from tumor cell resistance, and therefore, treatment failure. Methods: The potential anticancer properties of terrein, its antiproliferative effects, and its chemomodulatory effects on GCB were assessed against various colorectal cancer cell lines (HCT-116, HT-29, and SW620) under normoxic and hypoxic (pO2 ≤ 1%) conditions. Further analysis via flow cytometry was carried out in addition to quantitative gene expression and 1HNMR metabolomic analysis. Results: In normoxia, the effect of the combination treatment (GCB + Terr) was synergistic in HCT-116 and SW620 cell lines. In HT-29, the effect was antagonistic when the cells were treated with (GCB + Terr) under both normoxic and hypoxic conditions. The combination treatment was found to induce apoptosis in HCT-116 and SW620. Metabolomic analysis revealed that the change in oxygen levels significantly affected extracellular amino acid metabolite profiling. Conclusions: Terrein influenced GCB’s anti-colorectal cancer properties which are reflected in different aspects such as cytotoxicity, cell cycle progression, apoptosis, autophagy, and intra-tumoral metabolism under normoxic and hypoxic conditions.

Keywords