AI Article Synopsis

  • Chlorophyllin (CHL) is a compound derived from chlorophyll used as a food dye with potential anti-cancer effects; researchers tested a version loaded in PLGA (NCHL) for better drug delivery to cancer cells.
  • NCHL showed significant drug uptake and anti-cancer activity against A549 lung cancer cells, indicated by various cellular markers and changes in DNA structure.
  • In animal studies, NCHL effectively crossed the blood-brain barrier and aided in recovery from tissue damage, suggesting promising applications for cancer therapy at lower doses.

Article Abstract

Chlorophyllin (CHL), a sodium-copper-salt derived from chlorophyll, has been widely used as a food-dye, also reportedly having some anti-cancer effect. We tested if PLGA-loaded CHL (NCHL) could have additional protective abilities through its faster and targeted drug delivery in cancer cells. Physico-chemical characterization of NCHL was done through atomic-force microscopy and UV-spectroscopy. NCHL demonstrated greater ability of drug uptake and strong anti-cancer potentials in non-small cell lung cancer cells, A549, as revealed from data of% cell viability, generation of reactive-oxygen-species and expression of bax, bcl2, caspase3, p53 and cytochrome c proteins. Circular dichroic spectral data indicated strong binding of NCHL with calf-thymus-DNA, causing a conformational/structural change in DNA. Further, NCHL could cross the blood-brain-barrier in mice and showed greater efficacy in recovery process of tissue damage, reduction in chromosomal aberrations and% of micronuclei in co-mutagens (Sodiumarsenite+Benzo[a]Pyrene)-treated mice at a much reduced dose, indicating its use in therapeutic oncology.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.etap.2016.07.006DOI Listing

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