In vitro cytotoxicity of Indonesian stingless bee products against
human cancer cell lines
Asian Pac J Trop Biomed. 2014 Jul;4(7):549-56
OBJECTIVE:
To screen crude extracts of propolis, bee pollen and honey
from four stingless bee species [Trigona incisa (T. incisa)], Timia apicalis,
Trigona fusco-balteata and Trigona fuscibasis) native to East Kalimantan,
Indonesia for cytotoxic activity against five human cancer cell lines (HepG2,
SW620, ChaGo-I, KATO-III and BT474).
METHODS:
All samples were extracted with methanol, and then
subpartitioned with n-hexane and ethyl acetate. Each crude extract was screened
at 20 µg/mL for in vitro cytotoxicity against the cell lines using the
3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide assay. In
addition, four previously shown bioactive components from propolis (apigenin,
caffeic acid phenyl ester, kaempferol and naringenin) and two chemotherapeutic drugs
(doxorubicin and 5-fluorouracil) were used to evaluate the sensitivity of the
cell lines.
RESULTS:
Overall, crude extracts from propolis and honey had higher
cytotoxic activities than bee pollen, but the activity was dependent upon the
extraction solvent, bee species and cell line. Propolis extracts from T. incisa
and Timia apicalis showed the highest and lowest cytotoxic activity,
respectively. Only the HepG2 cell line was broadly sensitive to the honey
extracts. For pure compounds, doxorubicin was the most cytotoxic, the four
propolis compounds the least, but the ChaGo-I cell line was sensitive to
kaempferol at 10 µg/mL and KATO-III was sensitive to kaempferol and apigenin at
10 µg/mL. All pure compounds were effective against the BT474 cell line.
CONCLUSIONS:
Propolis from T. incisa and Trigona fusco-balteata contain
an in vitro cytotoxic activity against human cancer cell lines. Further study
is required, including the isolation and characterization of the active
antiproliferative agent(s).
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