Artemisinin reduces human melanoma cell migration by down-regulating alphaVbeta3 integrin and reducing metalloproteinase 2 production
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Abstract
Summary Artemisinin and its derivatives are well known
antimalarial drugs, particularly useful after resistance to
traditional antimalarial pharmaceuticals has started to occur
in Plasmodium falciparum. In recent years, anticancer
activity of artemisinin has been reported both in vitro and
in vivo. Artemisinin has inhibitory effects on cancer cell
growth and anti-angiogenetic activity. In the present
investigation, we analyzed the inhibitory effects of artemisinin
on migratory ability of melanoma cell lines (A375P
and A375M, low and medium metastatic properties,
respectively). We demonstrate that artemisinin induces cell
growth arrest in A375M, and affects A375P cells viability
with cytotoxic and growth inhibitory effects, while it was
not effective in contrasting proliferation of other tumor cell
lines (MCF7 and MKN). In addition, artemisinin affected
the migratory ability of A375M cells by reducing metalloproteinase
2 (MMP-2) production and down-regulating αvβ3 integrin expression. These findings introduce a potential of artemisinin as a chemotherapeutic agent in melanoma treatment