Proteomic
Study Reveals a Co-occurrence of Gallic
Acid-Induced Apoptosis and Glycolysis in B16F10 Melanoma Cells
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Abstract
Gallic acid (GA) has long been associated
with a wide range of
biological activities. In this study, its antitumor effect against
B16F10 melanoma cells was demonstrated by MTT assay, cell migration
assay, wound-healing assay, and flow cytometric analysis. GA with
a concentration >200 μM shows apoptotic activity toward B16F10
cells. According to Western blotting data, overexpressions of cleaved
forms of caspase-9, caspase-3, and PARP-1 and pro-apoptotic Bax and
Bad, accompanied by underexpressed anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL
indicate that GA induces B16F10 cell apoptosis via mitochondrial pathway.
The 2-DE based comparative proteomics was further employed in B16F10
cells with and without GA treatment for a large-scale protein expression
profiling. A total of 41 differential protein spots were quantified,
and their identities were characterized using LC-MS/MS analysis and
database matching. In addition to some regulated proteins that were
associated with apoptosis, interestingly, some identified proteins
involved in glycolysis such as glucokinase, α-enolase, aldolase,
pyruvate kinase, and GAPDH were simultaneously up-regulated, which
reveals that the GA-induced cellular apoptosis in B16 melanoma cells
is associated with metabolic glycolysis