Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/11000/40031

Octopus vulgaris ink extracts exhibit antioxidant, antimutagenic, cytoprotective, antiproliferative, and proapoptotic effects in selected human cancer cell lines


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Title:
Octopus vulgaris ink extracts exhibit antioxidant, antimutagenic, cytoprotective, antiproliferative, and proapoptotic effects in selected human cancer cell lines
Authors:
Hernández Zazueta, Martin Samuel
García Romo, Joel Said
Noguera Artiaga, Luis
Luzardo Ocampo, Iván
Carbonell-Barrachina, Ángel Antonio
Taboada Antelo, Pablo
Campos Vega, Rocio
Rosas Burgos, Ema Carina
Burboa Zazueta, María Guadalupe
Ezquerra Brauer, Josafat Marina
Martínez Soto, Juan Manuel
Santacruz Ortega, Hisila del Carmen
Burgos Hernández, Armando
Editor:
Wiley
Department:
Departamentos de la UMH::Tecnología Agroalimentaria
Issue Date:
2021-01
URI:
https://hdl.handle.net/11000/40031
Abstract:
Cancer is a noncommunicable disease of rising worldwide concern. Marine food products such as Octopusvulgaris ink (OI) could be sources of compounds addressing these concerns. This study aimed to evaluate the antimutagenic,cytoprotective, antiproliferative, proapoptotic, and antioxidant capacity of OI extracts on human cancer cell lines (22Rv1,HeLa, A549). The ARPE-19 cell line was used as a reference human cell line to evaluate the ink’s cytotoxicity. The waterextract exhibited the highest antimutagenic and cytoprotective effect, but the dichloromethane extract (DM) showedthe lowest half lethal concentration against 22Rv1 cells. Structural elucidation of purified DM fractions (F1, F2, F3)identified an unreported compound, N-(2-ozoazepan-3-yl)-pyrrolidine-2-carboxamide (OPC). DM-F2 showed highantiproliferative effect (LC 50 = 27.6 μg/mL), reactive species modulation, early-apoptosis induction (42.9%), and nucleidisruption in 22Rv1 cells. In silico analysis predicted high OPC affinity with Cyclin D1 (−6.70 kcal/mol), suggestingits potential impact on cell cycle arrest. These results highlight the antimutagenic, cytoprotective, and antiproliferativepotential health benefits derived from underutilized marine food products such as OI. Further investigations at in vitro orin vivo levels are required to elucidate mechanisms and health benefits from OI.
Keywords/Subjects:
antioxidant
apoptosis
bioactive compound
cytotoxicity
fish
Knowledge area:
CDU: Ciencias aplicadas: Ingeniería. Tecnología
Type of document:
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Access rights:
info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1111/1750-3841.15591
Published in:
Journal of Food Science Vol. 86, Iss. 2, 2021
Appears in Collections:
Artículos Tecnología Agroalimentaria



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