Ghrelin does not influence cancer progression in a lung adenocarcinoma cell line

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Abstract

Ghrelin, an endogenous ligand for the growth hormone secretagogue receptor (GHSR), is produced in the human stomach. Although ghrelin has therapeutic potential for cancer cachexia, ghrelin treatment may have a concern about accelerating cancer progression. Here, using the human lung adenocarcinoma cell line HLC-1, we investigated the effects of ghrelin on molecular mechanisms linked to cancer progression, including cell viability, proliferation, resistance to apoptosis, and mitochondrial activity. Both types of mouse alveolar epithelial cells (types I and II) expressed the GHSR, as did the human normal airway cell lines BEAS-2B and HLC-1. Treatment with ghrelin (10−2, 10−1, 1, 10 μM) did not affect cell viability or proliferation. Pretreatment of HLC-1 cells with ghrelin (10 μM) did not affect resistance to paclitaxel-induced apoptosis. The parameters of mitochondrial respiration, including basal respiration, proton leak, ATP production, maximal respiration, spare respiratory capacity, and non-mitochondrial respiration, of the HLC-1 cells pretreated with or without ghrelin were unchanged. Taken together, ghrelin does not influence cancer progression in lung adenocarcinoma cells.

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APA

Tsubouchi, H., Onomura, H., Saito, Y., Yanagi, S., Miura, A., Matsuo, A., … Nakazato, M. (2017). Ghrelin does not influence cancer progression in a lung adenocarcinoma cell line. Endocrine Journal, 64, S41–S46. https://doi.org/10.1507/endocrj.64.S41

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