Anticancer activity of Cyanothece sp. strain extracts from Egypt: First record

Objective: To assess the anticancer activity of eight cyanobacterial hydrophilic extracts on Ehrlich ascites carcinoma cell line. Methods: The cyanobacterial strains used in the investigation were collected from diverse habitats in Egypt. The initial cytotoxicity test of cyanobacterial hydrophilic e...

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Main Authors: Nermin Adel El Semary, Manar Fouda
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2015-12-01
Series:Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2221169115002166
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spelling doaj-b37f3f0139284d61981bb4f970c5b0422020-11-24T22:33:29ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsAsian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine2221-16912015-12-0151299299510.1016/j.apjtb.2015.09.004Anticancer activity of Cyanothece sp. strain extracts from Egypt: First recordNermin Adel El Semary0Manar Fouda1Department of Botany and Microbiology, Faculty of Science, Helwan University, Helwan, EgyptDepartment of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Helwan University, Helwan, EgyptObjective: To assess the anticancer activity of eight cyanobacterial hydrophilic extracts on Ehrlich ascites carcinoma cell line. Methods: The cyanobacterial strains used in the investigation were collected from diverse habitats in Egypt. The initial cytotoxicity test of cyanobacterial hydrophilic extracts was carried out by MTT assay. The in vitro anticancer activity of the four most active extracts was performed on MCF-7 cells using sulforhodamine B assay. Morphological and molecular techniques were used to characterise identity of the isolate from which the most potent cytotoxic extract was obtained. Results: Extracts from four cyanobacterial strains had higher cytotoxic activities scoring 76.68%, 77.70%, 76.70% and 74.45%, respectively. A considerable anticancer effect was only detected when the concentrated extracts were used. One cyanobacterial extract gave the highest anticancer activity on human breast adenocarcinoma cell line (57.6% of inhibition) as compared to control. The isolate was best-matched to Cyanothece sp. with sequence resemblance 98% to Cyanothece sp. strain PCC7564 and the phylogenetic analysis confirmed its close identity to the Cyanothece genus. Conclusions: This is the first study to report the anticancer effect of aqueous extracts derived from the unicellular Cyanothece sp. from Egypt and its potential as a plausible candidate for future mass biotechnological applications.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2221169115002166AnticancerCell lineCyanotheceHydrophilic extractMolecular
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nermin Adel El Semary
Manar Fouda
spellingShingle Nermin Adel El Semary
Manar Fouda
Anticancer activity of Cyanothece sp. strain extracts from Egypt: First record
Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine
Anticancer
Cell line
Cyanothece
Hydrophilic extract
Molecular
author_facet Nermin Adel El Semary
Manar Fouda
author_sort Nermin Adel El Semary
title Anticancer activity of Cyanothece sp. strain extracts from Egypt: First record
title_short Anticancer activity of Cyanothece sp. strain extracts from Egypt: First record
title_full Anticancer activity of Cyanothece sp. strain extracts from Egypt: First record
title_fullStr Anticancer activity of Cyanothece sp. strain extracts from Egypt: First record
title_full_unstemmed Anticancer activity of Cyanothece sp. strain extracts from Egypt: First record
title_sort anticancer activity of cyanothece sp. strain extracts from egypt: first record
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine
issn 2221-1691
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Objective: To assess the anticancer activity of eight cyanobacterial hydrophilic extracts on Ehrlich ascites carcinoma cell line. Methods: The cyanobacterial strains used in the investigation were collected from diverse habitats in Egypt. The initial cytotoxicity test of cyanobacterial hydrophilic extracts was carried out by MTT assay. The in vitro anticancer activity of the four most active extracts was performed on MCF-7 cells using sulforhodamine B assay. Morphological and molecular techniques were used to characterise identity of the isolate from which the most potent cytotoxic extract was obtained. Results: Extracts from four cyanobacterial strains had higher cytotoxic activities scoring 76.68%, 77.70%, 76.70% and 74.45%, respectively. A considerable anticancer effect was only detected when the concentrated extracts were used. One cyanobacterial extract gave the highest anticancer activity on human breast adenocarcinoma cell line (57.6% of inhibition) as compared to control. The isolate was best-matched to Cyanothece sp. with sequence resemblance 98% to Cyanothece sp. strain PCC7564 and the phylogenetic analysis confirmed its close identity to the Cyanothece genus. Conclusions: This is the first study to report the anticancer effect of aqueous extracts derived from the unicellular Cyanothece sp. from Egypt and its potential as a plausible candidate for future mass biotechnological applications.
topic Anticancer
Cell line
Cyanothece
Hydrophilic extract
Molecular
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2221169115002166
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