Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: https://hdl.handle.net/10495/35178
Título : Synthetic Peptide ∆M4-Induced Cell Death Associated with Cytoplasmic Membrane Disruption, Mitochondrial Dysfunction and Cell Cycle Arrest in Human Melanoma Cells
Autor : Patiño González, Edwin Bairon
Santa González, Gloria Angélica
Manrique Moreno, Marcela María
metadata.dc.subject.*: Melanoma
Puntos de control del ciclo celular
Cell Cycle Checkpoints
Péptidos Antimicrobianos
Antimicrobial Peptides
Neoplasias Cutáneas
Skin Neoplasms
Muerte Celular
Cell Death
Membrana Celular
Cell Membrane
Fecha de publicación : 2020
Editorial : MDPI (Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute)
Citación : Santa-González GA, Patiño-González E, Manrique-Moreno M. Synthetic Peptide ΔM4-Induced Cell Death Associated with Cytoplasmic Membrane Disruption, Mitochondrial Dysfunction and Cell Cycle Arrest in Human Melanoma Cells. Molecules. 2020 Dec 2;25(23):5684. doi: 10.3390/molecules25235684.
Resumen : ABSTRACT: Melanoma is the most dangerous and lethal form of skin cancer, due to its ability to spread to different organs if it is not treated at an early stage. Conventional chemotherapeutics are failing as a result of drug resistance and weak tumor selectivity. Therefore, efforts to evaluate novel molecules for the treatment of skin cancer are necessary. Antimicrobial peptides have become attractive anticancer agents because they execute their biological activity with features such as a high potency of action, a wide range of targets, and high target specificity and selectivity. In the present study, the antiproliferative activity of the synthetic peptide ∆M4 on A375 human melanoma cells and spontaneously immortalized HaCaT human keratinocytes was investigated. The cytotoxic effect of ∆M4 treatment was evaluated through propidium iodide uptake by flow cytometry. The results indicated selective toxicity in A375 cells and, in order to further investigate the mode of action, assays were carried out to evaluate morphological changes, mitochondrial function, and cell cycle progression. The findings indicated that ∆M4 exerts its antitumoral effects by multitarget action, causing cell membrane disruption, a change in the mitochondrial transmembrane potential, an increase of reactive oxygen species, and cell cycle accumulation in S-phase. Further exploration of the peptide may be helpful in the design of novel anticancer peptides.
ISSN : 1420-3049
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.3390/molecules25235684
Aparece en las colecciones: Artículos de Revista en Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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