Molecular Aspects of Piperine in Signaling Pathways Associated with Inflammation in Head and Neck Cancer.

Juliana Prado Gusson-Zanetoni, Luana Pereira Cardoso,Stefanie Oliveira de Sousa, Laura Luciana de Melo Moreira Silva, Júlia de Oliveira Martinho,Tiago Henrique,Eloiza Helena Tajara,Sonia Maria Oliani, Flávia Cristina Rodrigues-Lisoni

International journal of molecular sciences(2024)

Cited 0|Views3
No score
Abstract
Piperine, an active plant alkaloid from black pepper (Piper nigrum), has several pharmacological effects, namely antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory effects, which involve inhibiting molecular events associated with various stages of cancer development. The aim of this study was to investigate the molecular mechanisms of action of piperine in relation to its potential anticancer effect on head and neck cancer cells. Parameters related to neoplastic potential and cytokine, protein and gene expression were investigated in head and neck cancer cell lines (HEp-2 and SCC-25) treated with piperine. The results of the tests indicated that piperine modified morphology and inhibited viability and the formation of cell colonies. Piperine promoted genotoxicity by triggering apoptosis and cell cycle arrest in the G2/M and S phases. A decrease in cell migration was also observed, and there was decreased expression of MMP2/9 genes. Piperine also reduced the expression of inflammatory molecules (PTGS2 and PTGER4), regulated the secretion of cytokines (IFN-γ and IL-8) and modulated the expression of ERK and p38. These results suggest that piperine exerts anticancer effects on tumor cells by regulating signaling pathways associated with head and neck cancer.
More
Translated text
Key words
inflammation,herbal medicine,PTGS2,MAPK,MMPs,cytokines
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined