Dissertação
Avaliação da ativação de apoptose e autofagia como mecanismo de citotoxicidade induzida por um nitrocomposto e uma hidrazona em células tumorais humanas
Fecha
2016-09-23Autor
Gabriele de Matos Cardoso Perdigão
Institución
Resumen
The search for new antitumor drugs is a necessity mainly due to current treatments
present high toxicity, low effectiveness and emergence of resistance in some types of
cancers. In the process of drug discovery, compounds of different chemical classes
are assessed in models predictive and selected for chemical optimization and studies
of structure-activity relationship (SAR) to obtain the most promising candidates. We
carried out an investigation of mechanism of action and the antitumor potential of two
substances: a hydrazone (E6) and nitrocomposto (EBAC). These substances
showed low toxicity for normal cells such as human peripheral blood mononuclear
cell (PBMC). The evaluation of the mechanism of action was performed on leukemic
cell line (HL60) by phase contrast microscopy and LDH release, being able to verify
that HL60 cells had features consistent with apoptosis after EBAC and E6 treatment.
DNA fragmentation was confirmed after 24 hours of treatment by cell cycle, DNA
electrophoresis and fluorescence microscopy after Hoechst 33342-staining. The use
of pan-caspase inhibitor (Z-VAD-FMK), Annexin V and PI, quantification of reactive
oxygen species and caspase-3 activation confirmed apoptosis. Loss of the
mitochondrial membrane potential and caspase -9 detection suggest mitochondrial
pathway activation in this cell line. Differences in the mechanism of death were
observed for EBAC that induced accumulation of autophagic vacuoles analysis after
acridine orange and increasing the amount of viable cells after use of the autophagy
inhibitor bafilomycin A1. These results suggest that EBAC induced autophagy and
apoptosis simultaneously, which was not observed for E6. The results together show
that EBAC and E6 are promising substances with anti-tumor potential and justify the
continuation of studies of structure-activity relationship for obtaining more active
derivatives.