Abstract

Hypericin, an extract from St John's Wort (Hypericum perforatum L.), is a promising photosensitizer in the context of clinical photodynamic therapy due to its excellent photosensitizing properties and tumoritropic characteristics. Hypericin-PDT induced cytotoxicity elicits tumor cell death by various mechanisms including apoptosis, necrosis and autophagy-related cell death. However, limited reports on the efficacy of this photomedicine for the treatment of melanoma have been published. Melanoma is a highly aggressive tumor due to its metastasizing potential and resistance to conventional cancer therapies. The aim of this study was to investigate the response mechanisms of melanoma cells to hypericin-PDT in an in vitro tissue culture model. Hypericin was taken up by all melanoma cells and partially co-localized to the endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, lysosomes and melanosomes, but not the nucleus. Light activation of hypericin induced a rapid, extensive modification of the tubular mitochondrial network into a beaded appearance, loss of structural details of the endoplasmic reticulum and concomitant loss of hypericin co-localization. Surprisingly the opposite was found for lysosomal-related organelles, suggesting that the melanoma cells may be using these intracellular organelles for hypericin-PDT resistance. In line with this speculation we found an increase in cellular granularity, suggesting an increase in pigmentation levels in response to hypericin-PDT. Pigmentation in melanoma is related to a melanocyte-specific organelle, the melanosome, which has recently been implicated in drug trapping, chemotherapy and hypericin-PDT resistance. However, hypericin-PDT was effective in killing both unpigmented (A375 and 501mel) and pigmented (UCT Mel-1) melanoma cells by specific mechanisms involving the externalization of phosphatidylserines, cell shrinkage and loss of cell membrane integrity. In addition, this treatment resulted in extrinsic (A375) and intrinsic (UCT Mel-1) caspase-dependent apoptotic modes of cell death, as well as a caspase-independent apoptotic mode that did not involve apoptosis-inducing factor (501 mel). Further research is needed to shed more light on these mechanisms.

Highlights

  • IntroductionDespite numerous advances molecularly and therapeutically [1,2,3,4], the death resistance displayed by these cancer cells remains an aspect to be addressed

  • Phenotypic heterogeneity evident in melanoma cells The three metastatic melanoma cell lines used in this study displayed heterogenous phenotypes

  • Significant differences existed between all the melanoma cells and the non-melanoma breast cancer cell line, MCF7, used as a negative control (Fig. 1C)

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Summary

Introduction

Despite numerous advances molecularly and therapeutically [1,2,3,4], the death resistance displayed by these cancer cells remains an aspect to be addressed. A number of factors have been implicated in contributing to the heterogeneity of this cancer including both nature and nurture effects [8]. These factors seem to be related to specific mutations, cell death evading mechanisms, cellular transporters and the absence or presence of the ultraviolet (UV) light-absorbing pigment, melanin which has been shown to chelate therapeutic agents and produce an hypoxic environment due to increased oxygen consumption [9,10].

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