Chloroform fraction of Chaetomorpha brachygona, a marine green alga from Indian Sundarbans inducing autophagy in cervical cancer cells in vitro

Abstract Sundarbans Mangrove Ecosystem (SME) is a rich repository of bioactive natural compounds, with immense nutraceutical and therapeutic potential. Till date, the algal population of SME was not explored fully for their anticancer activities. Our aim is to explore the potential of these algal ph...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Indira Majumder, Subhabrata Paul, Anish Nag, Rita Kundu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2020-12-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-78592-9
id doaj-0a96a8b56d7a4d9f88b7136eca02396d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0a96a8b56d7a4d9f88b7136eca02396d2020-12-13T12:30:05ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222020-12-0110111210.1038/s41598-020-78592-9Chloroform fraction of Chaetomorpha brachygona, a marine green alga from Indian Sundarbans inducing autophagy in cervical cancer cells in vitroIndira Majumder0Subhabrata Paul1Anish Nag2Rita Kundu3Department of Botany, University of CalcuttaSchool of Biotechnology, Presidency UniversityDepartment of Life Sciences, CHRIST (Deemed To Be University)Department of Botany, University of CalcuttaAbstract Sundarbans Mangrove Ecosystem (SME) is a rich repository of bioactive natural compounds, with immense nutraceutical and therapeutic potential. Till date, the algal population of SME was not explored fully for their anticancer activities. Our aim is to explore the potential of these algal phytochemicals against the proliferation of cervical cancer cells (in vitro) and identify the mode of cell death induced in them. In the present work, the chloroform fraction of marine green alga, Chaetomorpha brachygona was used on SiHa cell line. The algal phytochemicals were identified by GCMS, LCMS and column chromatography and some of the identified compounds, known for significant anticancer activities, have shown strong Bcl-2 binding capacity, as analyzed through molecular docking study. The extract showed cytostatic and cytotoxic activity on SiHa cells. Absence of fragmented DNA, and presence of increased number of acidic vacuoles in the treated cells indicate nonapoptotic cell death. The mode of cell death was likely to be autophagic, as indicated by the enhanced expression of Beclin 1 and LC3BII (considered as autophagic markers) observed by Western blotting. The study indicates that, C. brachygona can successfully inhibit the proliferation of cervical cancer cells in vitro.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-78592-9
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Indira Majumder
Subhabrata Paul
Anish Nag
Rita Kundu
spellingShingle Indira Majumder
Subhabrata Paul
Anish Nag
Rita Kundu
Chloroform fraction of Chaetomorpha brachygona, a marine green alga from Indian Sundarbans inducing autophagy in cervical cancer cells in vitro
Scientific Reports
author_facet Indira Majumder
Subhabrata Paul
Anish Nag
Rita Kundu
author_sort Indira Majumder
title Chloroform fraction of Chaetomorpha brachygona, a marine green alga from Indian Sundarbans inducing autophagy in cervical cancer cells in vitro
title_short Chloroform fraction of Chaetomorpha brachygona, a marine green alga from Indian Sundarbans inducing autophagy in cervical cancer cells in vitro
title_full Chloroform fraction of Chaetomorpha brachygona, a marine green alga from Indian Sundarbans inducing autophagy in cervical cancer cells in vitro
title_fullStr Chloroform fraction of Chaetomorpha brachygona, a marine green alga from Indian Sundarbans inducing autophagy in cervical cancer cells in vitro
title_full_unstemmed Chloroform fraction of Chaetomorpha brachygona, a marine green alga from Indian Sundarbans inducing autophagy in cervical cancer cells in vitro
title_sort chloroform fraction of chaetomorpha brachygona, a marine green alga from indian sundarbans inducing autophagy in cervical cancer cells in vitro
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Abstract Sundarbans Mangrove Ecosystem (SME) is a rich repository of bioactive natural compounds, with immense nutraceutical and therapeutic potential. Till date, the algal population of SME was not explored fully for their anticancer activities. Our aim is to explore the potential of these algal phytochemicals against the proliferation of cervical cancer cells (in vitro) and identify the mode of cell death induced in them. In the present work, the chloroform fraction of marine green alga, Chaetomorpha brachygona was used on SiHa cell line. The algal phytochemicals were identified by GCMS, LCMS and column chromatography and some of the identified compounds, known for significant anticancer activities, have shown strong Bcl-2 binding capacity, as analyzed through molecular docking study. The extract showed cytostatic and cytotoxic activity on SiHa cells. Absence of fragmented DNA, and presence of increased number of acidic vacuoles in the treated cells indicate nonapoptotic cell death. The mode of cell death was likely to be autophagic, as indicated by the enhanced expression of Beclin 1 and LC3BII (considered as autophagic markers) observed by Western blotting. The study indicates that, C. brachygona can successfully inhibit the proliferation of cervical cancer cells in vitro.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-78592-9
work_keys_str_mv AT indiramajumder chloroformfractionofchaetomorphabrachygonaamarinegreenalgafromindiansundarbansinducingautophagyincervicalcancercellsinvitro
AT subhabratapaul chloroformfractionofchaetomorphabrachygonaamarinegreenalgafromindiansundarbansinducingautophagyincervicalcancercellsinvitro
AT anishnag chloroformfractionofchaetomorphabrachygonaamarinegreenalgafromindiansundarbansinducingautophagyincervicalcancercellsinvitro
AT ritakundu chloroformfractionofchaetomorphabrachygonaamarinegreenalgafromindiansundarbansinducingautophagyincervicalcancercellsinvitro
_version_ 1724384727306076160