Abstract

Background/aimsPlumbagin (PL) has been shown to effectively inhibit tumor growth and migration of hepatocellular carcinoma cells in previous studies, but the specific mechanism for this remains unclear. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of PL-induced apoptosis in epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) of human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in vivo and in vitro.MethodsSMMC-7721 cells were cultured, an EMT model was induced in vitro by TGF-β1, cell proliferation was detected by the MTT assay, cell invasion was analyzed by the Transwell invasion assay, and the apoptosis rate was measured by flow cytometry. RT-PCR was used to detect vimentin, E-cadherin, N-cadherin and snail mRNA, and Western blotting was used to detect the vimentin, caspase-3, PARP-1, E-cadherin, N-cadherin and snail protein expression levels. HE staining and TUNEL staining, immunohistochemistry and immunofluorescence were used to detect the expression levels of bax and bcl-2 in hepatocarcinoma xenografts and to evaluate their apoptosis in vivo.ResultsThe in vitro results showed that PL inhibited the proliferation of EMT model cells, increased the apoptosis rate of the EMT model, and significantly decreased the vimentin, PARP-1, N-cadherin and snail protein levels, but significantly increased E-cadherin and caspase-3 protein expression. In addition, the in vivo results indicated that PL can affect the expression of bax/bcl-2 apoptotic marker proteins.ConclusionPL may induce apoptosis of human hepatocellular carcinoma cells undergoing epithelial–mesenchymal transition by increasing the caspase-3 protein level and cleaving vimentin.

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