Abstract

Propofol is one of the most commonly used intravenous anesthetic agents during cancer resection surgery. A previous study has found that propofol can inhibit invasion and induce apoptosis of ovarian cancer cells. However, the underlying mechanisms are not known. miR-9 has been reported to be little expressed in ovarian cancer cells, which has been related to a poor prognosis in patients with ovarian cancer. Studies have also demonstrated that propofol could induce microRNAs expression and suppress NF-κB activation in some situations. In the present study, we assessed whether propofol inhibits invasion and induces apoptosis of ovarian cancer cells by miR-9/NF-κB signaling. Ovarian cancer ES-2 cells were transfected with anti-miR-9 or p65 cDNA or p65 siRNA for 24 h, after which the cells were treated with different concentrations of propofol (1, 5, and 10 μg/mL) for 24 h. Cell growth and apoptosis were detected using MTT assay and flow cytometry analysis. Cell migration and invasion were detected using Transwell and Wound-healing assay. Western blot and electrophoretic mobility shift assay were used to detect different protein expression and NF-κB activity. Propofol inhibited cell growth and invasion, and induced cell apoptosis in a dose-dependent manner, which was accompanied by miR-9 activation and NF-κB inactivation. Knockdown of miR-9 abrogated propofol-induced NF-κB activation and MMP-9 expression, reversed propofol-induced cell death and invasion of ES-2 cells. Knockdown of p65 inhibited NF-κB activation rescued the miR-9-induced down-regulation of MMP-9. In addition, overexpression of p65 by p65 cDNA transfection increased propofol-induced NF-κB activation and reversed propofol-induced down-regulation of MMP-9. Propofol upregulates miR-9 expression and inhibits NF-κB activation and its downstream MMP-9 expression, leading to the inhibition of cell growth and invasion of ES-2 cells.

Highlights

  • Malignant tumor metastasis consists of a series of biological occurrences, of which an important one is the presence of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) that are released from the primary tumor into the bloodstream [1]

  • The results showed a significant induction of apoptosis/cell death by propofol treatment

  • We found that: 1) exposure to propofol inhibited viability and induced significant cell apoptosis in the ES-2 cells; 2) exposure to propofol inhibited migration and invasion in the ES-2 cells; 3) targeting miR-9 or overexpression of p65 by p65 cDNA transfection significantly attenuated propofol-induced cell apoptosis and increased invasion and viability of ES-2 cells

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Summary

Introduction

Malignant tumor metastasis consists of a series of biological occurrences, of which an important one is the presence of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) that are released from the primary tumor into the bloodstream [1]. Numerous studies have recently found that tumor cells intravasate, rapidly transit through the circulation, and arrest in the vasculature of a secondary organ during operation, generally taking a few minutes [4,5,6]. Platelets form aggregates around CTCs or arrest tumor cells during this period. Most tumor cells have exited the bloodstream and seeded into the stroma of the secondary site [7]. The invasion of tumor cells in the circulation may occur very early in tumor development. A lack of understanding of the biology of CTCs has served as a barrier to developing rational therapy tailored to these high-risk patients

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