ReferenceID 962
Bioactive compounds from Octopus vulgaris ink extracts exerted anti-proliferative and anti-inflammatory effects in vitro
Food Chem Toxicol
Underutilized marine food products such as cephalopods' ink could be sources of bioactive compounds providing health benefits. This study aimed to assess the anti-proliferative and anti-inflammatory effects from Octopus
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Record Fields
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- Reference Id
- 962
- Evidence Id
- 17552
- Core Evidence Id
- 17552
- Source Reference Id
- 1917
- Herb2 Reference Id
- HBREF002714
- Subject Paper Key
- HERB006940_33722603
- Pubmed Id
- 33722603
- Doi
- 10.1016/j.fct.2021.112119
- Paper Title
- Bioactive compounds from Octopus vulgaris ink extracts exerted anti-proliferative and anti-inflammatory effects in vitro
- Paper Abstract
- Underutilized marine food products such as cephalopods' ink could be sources of bioactive compounds providing health benefits. This study aimed to assess the anti-proliferative and anti-inflammatory effects from Octopus vulgaris ink extracts (hexane-, ethyl acetate-, dichloromethane- (DM), and water extracts) using human colorectal (HT-29/HCT116) and breast (MDA-MB-231) cancer cells, and LPS-challenged murine RAW 264.7 cells. Except by ethyl-acetate, all of the extracts exhibited anti-proliferative effects without being cytotoxic to ARPE-19 and RAW 264.7 cells. Among DM fractions (F1/F2/F3), DM-F2 showed the highest anti-proliferative effect (LC50 = 52.64 mug/mL), inducing pro-apoptotic morphological disruptions in HCT116 cells. On RAW 264.7 cells, DM-F2 displayed the lowest nitrites reduction and up-regulation of key-cytokines from the JAK-STAT, PI3K-Akt, and IL-17 pathways. Compared to control, DM-F2 increased IL-4 and decreased NF-kappaB fluorometric expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). Metabolomic analysis of DM-F2 highlighted hexadecanoic acid and 1-(15-methyl-1-oxohexadecyl)-pyrrolidine as the most important metabolites. These compounds also exhibited high in silico binding affinity (-4.6 to -5.8 kcal/mol) to IL-1alpha, IL-1beta, and IL-2. Results suggested the joint immuno-modulatory and anti-proliferative effect derived from selected compounds of underutilized marine food products such as ink. This is the first report of such biological activities in extracts from O. vulgaris ink.
- Journal
- Food Chem Toxicol
- Publish Year
- 2021
- Experiment Subject
- mouse; human; breast (mda-mb-231) cancer cells; hct116 cells; human colorectal (ht-29/hct116; lps-challenged murine raw 264.7 cells; raw 264.7 cells
- Experiment Type
- Cell Experiment
- Phenotype Related
- Cancer
- Paper Title Cn
- Paper Title En
- Bioactive compounds from Octopus vulgaris ink extracts exerted anti-proliferative and anti-inflammatory effects in vitro
- Bilingual Status
- semi_complete