The molecular anti-metastatic potential of CBD and THC from Lebanese Cannabis via apoptosis induction and alterations in autophagy
The medicinal plant Cannabis sativa L. (C. sativa) is currently being extensively studied to determine the full extent of its therapeutic pharmacological potential.
Δ9-tetrahydocannabinol (THC) and cannabidiol (CBD) are the most thoroughly investigated compounds. We aimed to explore the anticancer activity of cannabinoids mixture isolated from the Lebanese C. sativa plant in ratios comparable to the local medicinal plant, to elucidate its mechanism of action in breast cancer cells in vitro. Cells were subjected to cytotoxicity assay, cell cycle analysis, Annexin V/PI dual staining, cell death ELISA, immunofluorescence, in addition to western blot analysis of apoptotic and autophagy markers. We further evaluated the anti-metastatic effect of cannabinoids on MDA-MB-231 using the scratch wound-healing, trans-well migration and invasion assays. Our results revealed the promising therapeutic benefits of CBD/THC on inhibiting the growth of breast cancer cells by promoting cellular fragmentation, phosphatidylserine translocation to the outer membrane leaflet and DNA fragmentation in both cell lines while inhibiting the motility of the triple negative breast cancer cells. In our study, CBD/THC mixture was found to exhibit a pro-apoptotic activity via the activation of the mitochondrial apoptotic pathway, independent from ROS production while also suggesting the activation of a caspase-dependent apoptotic pathway. Even though autophagy was altered upon exposure to the cannabinoid mixture, our data suggested that it is not the mechanism responsible of inducing cell death. In conclusion, our study demonstrates the promising therapeutic benefits of CBD and THC isolated from the Lebanese C. sativa plant on breast cancer cells in vitro.