Abstract:
Prostate cancer (PCa) is the most frequent cancer malignancy among men and the third
leading cause of cancer death in the developed world. To date, the exact molecular
mechanism underlying the role of caffeine one of the major coffee constituents on PCa
prognosis is not yet unraveled. Caffeine has many antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and anti
carcinogenic properties through the modulation of certain inflammatory markers such as
IL-6 and TNF-α.
The present study was carried out to evaluate the effect of caffeine on PCa cell lines
viability, namely PC3 and PC3-PSMA and assessing as well their inflammatory status by
quantifying the gene expression of IL6 and IκB-α. For the viability, WST1 assay was
performed and indicated a significant decrease in growth up to 50% with increased
caffeine doses depending on the cell type and incubation period (p<0.05). Interestingly,
IL-6 concentration increased after 24 hrs incubation with caffeine reaching ELISA levels
of 321pg/ml for PC3 cells and 88 pg/ml for PC3-PSMA cells (p<0.05). After 48 hrs IL-6
concentration dropped to 34 pg/ml for PC3 cells and it was undetectable in PC3-PSMA
cells. The expression of IL-6 and IκB-α genes were assessed using qRT-PCR. Variation
in either caffeine dose or incubation time period had no effect on IκB-α mRNA
abundance for both cell lines (p>0.05). High IL-6 expression was found at high caffeine
concentration (10 and 20 mM) for PC3 and PC3-PSMA cells (p<0.05). These results
demonstrate that caffeine increased inflammation but decreased viability through the
stabilization of IκB-α which is perfectly correlated with the levels of NF-κB responsible
of cell proliferation and survival.
Description:
M.S. -- Faculty of Natural and Applied Sciences, Notre Dame University, Louaize, 2020; "A thesis presented to the Faculty of Natural and Applied Sciences in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Biology."; Includes bibliographical references (leaves 58-61).