2024 Medical oncology (Northwood, …

Resveratrol nanoparticles induce apoptosis in oral cancer stem cells by disrupting the interaction between beta-catenin and GLI-1 through p53-independent activation of p21.

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Medical oncology (Northwood, London, England) Vol. 41 (7) : 167 • Jun 2024

Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are mainly responsible for tumorigenesis, chemoresistance, and cancer recurrence. CSCs growth and progression are regulated by multiple signaling cascades including Wnt/beta-catenin and Hh/GLI-1, which acts independently or via crosstalk. Targeting the crosstalk of signaling pathways would be an effective approach to control the CSC population. Both Wnt/beta-catenin and Hh/GLI-1 signaling cascades are known to be regulated by p53/p21-dependent mechanism. However, it is interesting to delineate whether p21 can induce apoptosis in a p53-independent manner. Therefore, utilizing various subtypes of oral CSCs (SCC9-PEMT p53(+/+)p21(+/+), SCC9-PEMT p53(-/-)p21(+/+), SCC9-PEMT p53(+/+)p21(-/-) and SCC9-PEMT p53(-/-)p21(-/-)), we have examined the distinct roles of p53 and p21 in Resveratrol nanoparticle (Res-Nano)-mediated apoptosis. It is interesting to see that, besides the p53/p21-mediated mechanism, Res-Nano exposure also significantly induced apoptosis in oral CSCs through a p53-independent activation of p21. Additionally, Res-Nano-induced p21-activation deregulated the beta-catenin-GLI-1 complex and consequently reduced the TCF/LEF and GLI-1 reporter activities. In agreement with in vitro data, similar experimental results were obtained in in vivo mice xenograft model.

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