Resumen :
Marine compounds are a potential source of new anticancer drugs. In this study, the
antiproliferative e_ects of 20 invertebrate marine extracts on three colon cancer cell models (HGUE-C-1,
HT-29, and SW-480) were evaluated. Extracts from two nudibranchs (Phyllidia varicosa, NA and
Dolabella auricularia, NB), a holothurian (Pseudocol ochirus violaceus, PS), and a soft coral (Carotalcyon
sp., CR) were selected due to their potent cytotoxic capacities. The four marine extracts exhibited
strong antiproliferative e_ects and induced cell cycle arrest at the G2/Mtransition, which evolved into
early apoptosis in the case of the CR, NA, and NB extracts and necrotic cell death in the case of the
PS extract. All the extracts induced, to some extent, intracellular ROS accumulation, mitochondrial
depolarization, caspase activation, and DNA damage. The compositions of the four extracts were
fully characterized via HPLC-ESI-TOF-MS analysis, which identified up to 98 compounds. We
propose that, among the most abundant compounds identified in each extract, diterpenes, steroids,
and sesqui- and seterterpenes (CR); cembranolides (PS); diterpenes, polyketides, and indole terpenes
(NA); and porphyrin, drimenyl cyclohexanone, and polar steroids (NB) might be candidates for the
observed activity. We postulate that reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation is responsible for the
subsequent DNA damage, mitochondrial depolarization, and cell cycle arrest, ultimately inducing
cell death by either apoptosis or necrosis
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