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Effects of Celecoxib and L-Name on Apoptosis and Cell Cycle of Mcf-7 Cd44+/Cd24-/Low Subpopulation Publisher



Majdzadeh M1 ; Aliebrahimi S2 ; Vatankhah M2 ; Ostad SN1
Authors
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Authors Affiliations
  1. 1. Department of Toxicology and Pharmacology, Faculty of Pharmacy and Poisoning Research Center, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
  2. 2. Department of Cellular and Molecular Biology, School of Biology, College of Science, University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran

Source: Turkish Journal of Biology Published:2017


Abstract

Recent studies have reported that cancer stem cells (CSCs) play a pivotal role in treatment failure, causing cancer recurrence. Here, we investigated the effects of L-NAME (an iNOS inhibitor) and celecoxib (a selective COX-2 inhibitor) on CSC-like cells (CSC-LCs) and their parental cells. Breast CSC-LCs derived from the MCF-7 cell line were sorted and characterized with the CD44+/CD24-/low phenotype. After isolation, the percentage of the subpopulation expressing CD44+/CD24-/low biomarkers increased considerably from 0.96% to 28.6%. Use of L-NAME and celecoxib showed antiproliferative activity towards both MCF-7 and CSC-LCs. Although celecoxib enhanced apoptotic cell death, the CSC-LC population was more resistant than parental cells. Moreover, L-NAME was less effective at inducing apoptosis, suggesting an involvement of different mechanisms of cell death. L-NAME caused cell cycle arrest in the S-phase in CSC-LCs, while celecoxib induced G0/G1 arrest in CSC-LCs and their parental cells. Immunocytochemistry results demonstrated that L-NAME had a similar potency to attenuate iNOS expression in MCF-7 and CSC-LCs; however, celecoxib reduced COX-2 expression in MCF-7 cells. The results show the crucial role of NOS and COX-2 in the maintenance of CD44+/CD24-/low breast CSC-LCs and suggest that L-NAME and celecoxib could have clinical implication in combination therapy. © TUBITAK.