Abstract

BackgroundIt had been demonstrated that sugars from various plants can act as potent agents, which induce apoptosis of cancer cells.MethodsUsing HPLC, we fractionated a mixture of two plant extracts from the plant family Solanaceae, namely Capsicum chinense and the plant family Amaryllidaceae namely Allium sativum. We evaluated the effect of different fractions on apoptosis of HepG2 cell line. The most effective fraction was further studied to determine its molecular composition using mass spectrometry (MS) and NMR. We further evaluated the effect of determined molecular composition found in the selected fraction by using a mixture of commercially available substances, which were found in the fraction and tested its pro-apoptotic effect on HepG2 cells. To get some insight into potential apoptotic mechanisms we studied caspase-3 activity and mitochondrial integrity in treated cells.ResultsOut of 93 fractions obtained by HPLC from the plant extract we found HPLC fraction 10 (10 min elution) was the most effective. MS and NMR studies revealed high presence of cellobiose together with vitamin C, sulphur (S) and trace amounts of selenium (Se). HPLC fraction 10 triggered apoptosis of HepG2 within 3 h in the 0.01–1.0 mg/mL concentration range. Furthermore, a mixture of pure cellobiose, vitamin C, S and Se (complex cellobiose/C/S/Se) had a very similar capacity in inducing apoptosis of HepG2 cells compared to HPLC fraction 10. Complex cellobiose/C/S/Se was capable of inducing caspase-3 activity and led to loss of mitochondrial integrity. The capacity of cellobiose alone to induce apoptosis of HepG2 was approximately 1000-fold lower compared to complex cellobiose/C/S/Se.ConclusionIn this study we present the highly synergistic effect of a unique complex consisting of cellobiose, vitamin C, sulphur and selenium on triggering the apoptosis of human hepatocellular carcinoma (HepG2) cell line.

Highlights

  • It had been demonstrated that sugars from various plants can act as potent agents, which induce apoptosis of cancer cells

  • The fractions of the mixture of both cold plant extracts of Capsicum chinense and Allium sativum together acquired by High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) analysis were analysed by MTS test to determine, which fraction triggers loss of viability of cancer cells and has the crucial effective molecules, we were searching for

  • Mass spectrometric analysis of the fraction 10 showed the peak 383.1 with molecular weight of 342.3 g/mol what is the mass of cellobiose, what was in further experiments confirmed with the Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) analysis

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Summary

Introduction

It had been demonstrated that sugars from various plants can act as potent agents, which induce apoptosis of cancer cells. Due to the widespread historical account of medicinal effects of yew plant extracts, United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) together with the National Cancer. Institute (NCI) started a screening process whereby Pacific yew extracts were tested against two cancer cell lines, ovarian and breast cancer [2, 3]. An important finding resulting from this screening was paclitaxel, a hydrophobic antineoplastic agent found in Taxus brevifolia which has been shown to have anticancer properties. It is currently used for the treatment of ovarian, breast and lung cancer [4]. Current researches are not limited to hydrophobic anti-neoplastic agents, but continues to shed the light on other water-

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