Abstract

During the transition from human oral mucosal epithelial cells (HOMEC) to oral squamous cell carcinoma cells (Cal27), the cells must have undergone a precancerous state. To explore the malignant rule of HOMEC, plv-HOMEC was used as a model cell for the precancerous state to investigate plv-HOMEC's apoptosis by comparing human oral mucosal epithelial cells established by Lentivirus-mediated hTERT (plv-HOMEC) with HOMEC and human Cal27. The lentiviral particles overexpressing hTERT were packaged and transfected into primary HOMEC to obtain plv-HOMEC. Expression levels of NF-κB were detected in the cytoplasm and nucleus of Cal27, plv-HOMEC and HOMEC. The level of intracellular reactive oxygen species was measured to verify the endoplasmic reticulum pathway, cytochrome C expression was detected to verify the mitochondrial pathway, and FasL gene expression was detected to verify the death receptor apoptosis pathway. The total expression of NF-κB in plv-HOMEC increased, mainly due to the greater nuclear import of NF-κB, but it was still much lower than Cal27. The endoplasmic reticulum apoptosis pathway of plv-HOMEC was not significantly affected, and there were no significant differences between them and the HOMEC cells; the mitochondrial apoptosis pathway of plv-HOMEC was inhibited, and the expression of Cyt C was very close to that of Cal27, indicating that the characteristics of plv-HOMEC are so familiar with cancer cells; the death receptor apoptosis pathway of plv-HOMEC was also inhibited, and in this apoptotic pathway, plv-HOMEC were more similar to cancer cells than to HOMEC cells. The present data suggest that NF-κB nucleation may increase in the early stage of healthy cells' carcinogenesis, followed by inhibition of the mitochondrial pathway and the death receptor apoptotic pathway.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call