Abstract

Hinokitiol is a tropolone-related compound isolated from the heartwood of cupressaceous plants. It is known to exhibit various biological functions including antibacterial, antifungal, and antioxidant activities. In the study, we investigated the antitumor activities of hinokitiol against human osteosarcoma cells. The results revealed that hinokitiol treatment inhibited cell viability of human osteosarcoma U-2 OS and MG-63 cells in the MTT assay. Further study revealed that hinokitiol exposure caused cell cycle arrest at the S phase and a DNA damage response with the induction of γ-H2AX foci in both osteosarcoma cell lines. In U-2 OS cells with wild-type tumor suppressor p53, we found that hinokitiol exposure induced p53 expression and cellular senescence, and knockdown of p53 suppressed the senescence. However, in MG-63 cells with mutated p53, a high percentage of cells underwent apoptosis with cleaved-PARP expression and Annexin V staining after hinokitiol treatment. In addition, up-regulated autophagy was observed both in hinokitiol-exposed U-2 OS and MG-63 cells. As the autophagy was suppressed through the autophagy inhibitor chloroquine, hinokitiol-induced senescence in U-2 OS cells was significantly enhanced accompanying more abundant p53 expression. In MG-63 cells, co-treatment of chloroquine increased hinokitiol-induced apoptosis and decreased cell viability of the treated cells. Our data revealed that hinokitiol treatment could result in different cell responses, senescence or apoptosis in osteosarcoma cell lines, and suppression of autophagy could promote these effects. We hypothesize that the analysis of p53 status and co-administration of autophagy inhibitors might provide more precise and efficacious therapies in hinokitiol-related trials for treating osteosarcoma.

Highlights

  • Osteosarcoma is the most common type of primary malignant bone tumor, mainly identifying in adolescents and young adults

  • To assess the mechanism involved in hinokitiol-induced S phase arrest in U-2 OS and MG-63 cell lines, we investigated the expression of DNA damage response-related proteins by Western blotting

  • The data revealed that hinokitiol exposure resulted in rapid phosphorylation of ATM, addition, we found that γ-H2AX formed distinct nuclear foci after hinokitiol treatment in both cell lines (Figure 3B)

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Summary

Result in Senescence or Apoptosis in

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Introduction
Results
Hinokitiol Induces S-Phase Arrest of Cell Cycle and DNA Damage Response
Hinokitiol
Hinokitiol Induces Senescence in U-2 OS Cells
Hinokitiol Triggers Apoptosis in MG-63 Cells
Hinokitiol induces apoptosis in MG-63
The Suppression of Autophagy Enhances Hinokitiol-Induced Response
Discussion
Cell Culture
Colony Formation Assay
Cell Viability Assay
Flow Cytometry Analysis
Apoptosis Assay
Cell Lysis and Immunoblotting
EdU Incorporation Assay
Immunofluorescence Staining
4.10. Statistical Analysis
Full Text
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