Litcius/Paper detail

miR-34a-5p might have an important role for inducing apoptosis by down-regulation of SNAI1 in apigenin-treated lung cancer cells

Rieko Aida, Keitaro Hagiwara, Kazunori Okano, Kyoko Nakata, Yuho Obata, Takahiro Yamashita, Kaoru Yoshida, Hiromi Hagiwara

2021Molecular Biology Reports43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Apigenin is a flavonoid with antioxidant and anticancer effects. It has been reported that apigenin inhibits proliferation, migration, and invasion and induces apoptosis in cultured lung cancer cells. However, there is little information on the involvement of microRNAs (miRNAs) in its effects. miRNA microarray analysis and polymerase-chain-reaction analysis of miRNAs revealed that treatment of human lung cancer A549 cells with apigenin up-regulated the level of miR-34a-5p. Furthermore, mRNA microarray analysis and the results of three microRNA target prediction tools showed that Snail Family Transcriptional Repressor 1 (SNAI1), which inhibits the induction of apoptosis, had its mRNA expression down-regulated in A549 cells treated with apigenin. Our findings suggest that apigenin might induce apoptosis by down-regulation of SNAI1 through up-regulation of miR-34a-5p in A549 cells.

Topics & Concepts

ApigeninSNAI1ApoptosismicroRNAA549 cellCancer researchChemistryBiologyCell biologyDownregulation and upregulationEpithelial–mesenchymal transitionFlavonoidBiochemistryGeneAntioxidantCancer-related molecular mechanisms researchMicroRNA in disease regulationGenomics and Phylogenetic Studies