Parasporin-2 from a new bacillus thuringiensis 4r2 strain induces caspases activation and apoptosis in human cancer cells

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Abstract

In previous studies, parasporin-2Aa1, originally isolated from Bacillus thuringiensis strain A1547, was shown to be cytotoxic against specific human cancer cells but the mechanisms of action were not studied. In the present study, we found that proteinase K activated parasporin-2Aa1 protein isolated from a novel B. thuringiensis strain, 4R2, was specifically cytotoxic to endometrial, colon, liver, cervix, breast and prostate cancer. It showed no toxicity against normal cells. Upon treatment with proteinase K-activated parasporin-2Aa1, morphological changes were observed and western blot analysis revealed the cleavage of poly (ADP-Ribose) polymerase, caspase-3 and caspase-9 in cancer cell lines exclusively, indicative of programmed cell death, apoptosis. Flow cytometry analyses, using propidium iodide and annexin V, as well as a caspases 3/7 assay confirmed apoptosis induction. Further analyses were performed to study survival pathways, including AKT, XIAP, ERK1/2 and PAR-4, a known inducer of apoptosis. These results indicate that parasporin-2Aa1 is a selective cytotoxic protein that induces apoptosis in various human cancer cell lines from diverse tissues.

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Brasseur, K., Auger, P., Asselin, E., Parent, S., Côté, J. C., & Sirois, M. (2015). Parasporin-2 from a new bacillus thuringiensis 4r2 strain induces caspases activation and apoptosis in human cancer cells. PLoS ONE, 10(8). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0135106

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