Cytotoxicity of Dental Compounds towards Human Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma and Normal Oral Cells

被引:0
|
作者
Koh, Teho [2 ]
Machino, Mamoru [2 ]
Murakami, Yukio [2 ]
Umemura, Naoki [1 ]
Sakagami, Hiroshi [1 ]
机构
[1] Meikai Univ, Sch Dent, Div Pharmacol, Sakado, Saitama 3500283, Japan
[2] Meikai Univ, Sch Dent, Div Oral Diag, Sakado, Saitama 3500283, Japan
来源
IN VIVO | 2013年 / 27卷 / 01期
关键词
Eugenol; hydroquinone; benzoquinone; phtharal; oral cells; squamous cell carcinoma; EUGENOL-RELATED COMPOUNDS; CO2-LASER IRRADIATION; HORMESIS INDUCTION; RADICAL INTENSITY; INDUCED APOPTOSIS; TUMOR-CELLS; DEATH; HYDROQUINONE; EXTRACTS; LINES;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R-3 [医学研究方法]; R3 [基础医学];
学科分类号
1001 ;
摘要
Aim: The cytotoxicity of four dental compounds, hydroquinone, benzoquinone, eugenol and phtharal towards human oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) cell lines, normal human oral cells (gingival fibroblast, pulp cell, periodontal ligament fibroblast) and skin keratinocytes was investigated. Materials and Methods: Viable cell number was determined by the 3[4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl]-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) method. The concentration that reduced the viable cells by 50% (CC50) and the concentration that increased the viability of UV-irradiated cells to 50% (EC50) were determined from the dose-response curves. The tumor-specificity index (TS) was determined by the ratio of the mean CC50 for normal cells to the one for tumor cells. Apoptosis induction was monitored by assay of internucleosomal DNA fragmentation and caspase-3/-7 activation. Results: When both oral OSCC and normal oral cells were incubated for 4 h with any of hydroquinone, benzoquinone, eugenol and phtharal, irreversible cell growth inhibition, accompanied by cell death occurred without induction of apoptotic markers, although caspase-3/-7 activation was observed at 6 h or later. These compounds exhibited very low tumor-specificity (TS=0.4-1.3), as compared with anticancer drugs (5-fluorouracil, melphalan, peplomycin) (TS=4.1-9.7). Human skin keratinocytes were the most resistant to these drugs, and a long incubation time was required to induce irreversible growth inhibition. However, all dental compounds exhibited very low tumor-specificity (TS=0.4-2.4), compared to human skin keratinocytes and OSCC cell lines. None of the dental compounds exhibited any hormetic growth stimulation, nor protected the cells from UV-induced damage. Conclusion: These results suggest that apoptosis is not involved in the early stage of growth inhibition induced by dental compounds.
引用
收藏
页码:85 / 95
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Amplification of Mast Cell Density in Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma and Normal Oral Mucosa: A Comparative Study
    Kabiraj, Arpita
    Vishal
    Naik, Shantala R.
    Gupta, Prashant
    Khaitan, Tanya
    Samanta, Jaydeep
    JOURNAL OF INDIAN ACADEMY OF ORAL MEDICINE AND RADIOLOGY, 2023, 35 (04) : 511 - 515
  • [42] Cytotoxicity and selectiveness of Brazilian Piper species towards oral carcinoma cells
    Macedo, Arthur L.
    da Silva, Diego P. D.
    Moreira, Davyson L.
    de Queiroz, Lucas N.
    Vasconcelos, Thatyana R. A.
    Araujo, Geisoellen F.
    Kaplan, Maria Auxiliadora C.
    Pereira, Suiane S. C.
    de Almeida, Elan C. P.
    Valverde, Alessandra L.
    Robbs, Bruno K.
    BIOMEDICINE & PHARMACOTHERAPY, 2019, 110 : 342 - 352
  • [43] Shifts in cellular localization of moesin in normal oral epithelium, oral epithelial dysplasia, verrucous carcinoma and oral squamous cell carcinoma
    Kobayashi, H
    Sagara, J
    Masumoto, J
    Kurita, H
    Kurashina, K
    Taniguchi, S
    JOURNAL OF ORAL PATHOLOGY & MEDICINE, 2003, 32 (06) : 344 - 349
  • [44] TWIST and p-Akt immunoexpression in normal oral epithelium, oral dysplasia and in oral squamous cell carcinoma
    Silva, Brunno-Santos de Freitas
    Yamamoto, Fernanda-Paula
    Pontes, Flavia-Sirotheau Correa
    Cury, Sergio Elias-Vieira
    Fonseca, Felipe-Paiva
    Pontes, Helder Antonio-Rebelo
    Pinto-Junior, Decio-dos Santos
    MEDICINA ORAL PATOLOGIA ORAL Y CIRUGIA BUCAL, 2012, 17 (01): : E29 - E34
  • [45] Oral leukoplakia and oral cavity squamous cell carcinoma
    Bewley, Arnaud F.
    Farwell, D. Gregory
    CLINICS IN DERMATOLOGY, 2017, 35 (05) : 461 - 467
  • [46] A snapshot of miRNAs in oral squamous cell carcinoma: Difference between cancer cells and corresponding normal cells
    Hosseini, Vahid
    Montazersaheb, Soheila
    Hejazi, Narges
    Aslanabadi, Sina
    Mohammadinasr, Mina
    Hejazi, Mohammad Saeid
    PATHOLOGY RESEARCH AND PRACTICE, 2023, 249
  • [47] Simultaneous Fluorescence microscopy and spectroscopy of Oral squamous cell carcinoma, Oral dysplasia and normal tissue
    Thapa, Pramila
    Bhatt, Sunil
    Mann, Priyanka
    Nayyar, Vivek
    Mishra, Deepika
    Mehta, Dalip Singh
    TRANSLATIONAL BIOPHOTONICS: DIAGNOSTICS AND THERAPEUTICS III, 2023, 12627
  • [48] Differences in the response of normal oral mucosa, oral leukoplakia, oral squamous cell carcinoma-derived mesenchymal stem cells, and epithelial cells to photodynamic therapy
    Guo, Qianyun
    Ji, Xiaoli
    Zhang, Lei
    Liu, Xingyun
    Wang, Yutian
    Liu, Zijian
    Jin, Jianqiu
    Han, Ying
    Liu, Hongwei
    JOURNAL OF PHOTOCHEMISTRY AND PHOTOBIOLOGY B-BIOLOGY, 2024, 255
  • [49] A Study on the Effect of Human Dental Pulp Stem Cell Conditioned Medium on Human Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma Cell Lines
    Hanyu, Shintaro
    Sakuma, Kaname
    Tanaka, Akira
    JOURNAL OF HARD TISSUE BIOLOGY, 2019, 28 (03) : 281 - 288
  • [50] Human papillomavirus and oral squamous cell carcinoma: A review of HPV-positive oral squamous cell carcinoma and possible strategies for future
    Jiang, Shan
    Dong, Yong
    CURRENT PROBLEMS IN CANCER, 2017, 41 (05) : 323 - 327