The role of Ca2+ on the effects of capsaicin on human leukemia HL-60 cells in vitro and the molecular mechanisms of capsaicin-induced apoptosis were investigated. The flow cytometric analysis indicated that capsaicin decreased the percentage of viable HL-60 cells, via the induction of G0/G1-phase cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. Capsaicin-induced G0/G1-phase arrest involved the suppression of CDK2 and the cyclin E complex, which are check-point enzymes for cells moving from G0/G1- to S-phase. Capsaicin-induced apoptosis was associated with the elevation of intracellular reactive oxygen species and Ca2+ production, decreased the levels of mitochondrial membrane potential, promoted cytochrome c release and increased the activation of caspase-3. An intracellular Ca2+ chelator (BAPTA) significantly inhibited capsaicin-induced apoptosis. Capsaicin-induced apoptosis was time-and dose-dependent. These results suggest that the capsaicin-induced apoptosis of HL-60 cells may result from the activation of caspase-3 and the intracellular Ca2+ release pathway.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

capsaicin-induced apoptosis
24
hl-60 cells
16
human leukemia
8
leukemia hl-60
8
apoptosis capsaicin-induced
8
activation caspase-3
8
caspase-3 intracellular
8
intracellular ca2+
8
capsaicin-induced
7
apoptosis
7

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!