Safrole-induced cellular Ca2+ increases and death in human osteosarcoma cells

Pharmacological Research : the Official Journal of the Italian Pharmacological Society
Hsueh-Chi LinChung-Ren Jan

Abstract

The effect of the carcinogen safrole on intracellular Ca2+ movement has not been explored in osteoblast-like cells. This study examined whether safrole could alter Ca2+ handling and viability in MG63 human osteosarcoma cells. Cytosolic free Ca2+ levels ([Ca2+]i) in populations of cells were measured using fura-2 as a fluorescent Ca2+ probe. Safrole at concentrations above 130 microM increased [Ca2+]i in a concentration-dependent manner with an EC50 value of 450 microM. The Ca2+ signal was reduced by 30% by removing extracellular Ca2+. Addition of Ca2+ after safrole had depleted intracellular Ca2+ induced Ca2+ influx, suggesting that safrole caused Ca2+ entry. In Ca2+-free medium, after pretreatment with 650 microM safrole, 1 microM thapsigargin (an endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ pump inhibitor) failed to release more Ca2+; and pretreatment with thapsigargin inhibited most of the safrole-induced [Ca2+]i increases. Inhibition of phospholipase C with U73122 did not affect safrole-induced Ca2+ release; whereas activation of protein kinase C with phorbol ester enhanced safrole-induced [Ca2+]i increase. Trypan exclusion assays revealed that incubation with 65 microM safrole for 30 min did not kill cells, but incubation with 650 microM sa...Continue Reading

Citations

Dec 22, 2010·Journal of Dental Research·F-S YuJ-G Chung
Oct 29, 2014·Cancer Prevention Research·Ann M Bode, Zigang Dong
Jun 3, 2021·Molecules : a Journal of Synthetic Chemistry and Natural Product Chemistry·Karin Lunz, Iris Stappen

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