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Arenobufagin induces cell apoptosis by modulating the cell cycle regulator claspin and the JNK pathway in nasopharyngeal carcinoma cells

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posted on 2024-04-25, 06:20 authored by Hsin-Yu Ho, Mu-Kuan Chen, Chia-Chieh Lin, Yu-Sheng Lo, Yi-Ching Chuang, Ming-Ju Hsieh

The high recurrence rate and incidence of distant metastasis of nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) result in poor prognosis. It is necessary to identify natural compounds that can complement combination radiation therapy. Arenobufagin is commonly used for heart diseases and liver cancer, but its effectiveness in NPC is unclear.

The effect of arenobufagin-induced apoptosis was measured by a cell viability assay, tumorigenic assay, fluorescence assay, and Western blot assay through NPC-039 and NPC-BM cell lines. The protease array, Western blot assay, and transient transfection were used to investigate the underlying mechanism of arenobufagin-induced apoptosis. An NPC xenograft model was established to explore the antitumor activity of arenobufagin in vivo.

Our findings indicated that arenobufagin exerted cytotoxic effects on NPC cells, inhibiting proliferation through apoptosis activation. Downregulation of claspin was confirmed in arenobufagin-induced apoptosis. Combined treatment with arenobufagin and mitogen-activated protein kinase inhibitors demonstrated that arenobufagin induced NPC apoptosis through the c-Jun N-terminal kinases (JNK) pathway inhibition. Furthermore, arenobufagin suppressed NPC tumor proliferation in vivo.

Our results revealed the antitumor effect of arenobufagin in vitro and in vivo. Arenobufagin may have clinical utility in treating NPC due to its suppression of claspin and inhibition of the JNK pathway.

Funding

This research was supported by grants from National Science and Technology Council (MOST 111-2314-B-371-007-MY2) and Changhua Christian Hospital (111-CCH-IRP-006).

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