Abstract

Sodium butyrate (NaBu) is a short-chain fatty acid (SCFA), which has been proposed as a potential anticancer agent. Apoptosis-associated speck-like protein (ASC) is a pro-apoptotic signaling factor that is subjected to epigenetic silencing in human cancers. Modulation by the aberrant methylation of CpG islands of ASC is a well-characterized epigenetic mechanism, and the methylation-induced silencing of ASC has been observed in several types of tumors. NaBu induces cell cycle arrest, markers of cell differentiation and apoptosis in colon cancer. NaBu promotes transcriptional activation by relaxing the DNA conformation and displays anti-proliferative and differentiating activity in a wide variety of cancers. Thus, we used NaBu to investigate the relationship between the status of cell proliferation and the re-expression of ASC in colon carcinoma LS174T cells. Our experiments determined ASC re-expression at the protein level using western blotting. In addition, we used reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction to detect the expression levels of ASC mRNA and an MTT assay to detect the inhibitory rate of cell growth. The apoptosis rate was also detected for further validation of the re-expression of ASC. The results showed that ASC re-expression was significantly increased in the LS174 cells following NaBu treatment in a time- and dose-dependent manner. The expression of ASC also induced the apoptosis of LS174T cells. These results suggest that NaBu plays a role in the reactivation of ASC expression and that the latter promotes the apoptosis of LS174T cells.

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