Abstract

Zerumbone (ZER), a potential anticancer compound, isolated from the fresh rhizomes of Zingiber zerumbet. In this investigation, the cytotoxic properties of ZER were evaluated, on cancer cells of human cervix (HeLa), breast and ovary, and normal cells of Chinese Hamster ovary, using MTT assay. Apoptogenic effects of ZER on HeLa were studied using fluorescence microscopy (AO/PI double staining), scanning and transmission electron microscopy (SEM and TEM), and colorimetric assay of the apoptosis promoter enzyme, caspase-3. The results of MTT assay showed that ZER has less effect on normal cells compared to cancer cells. The lowest of ZER was observed on HeLa cells. Cytological observations showed nuclear and chromatin condensation, cell shrinkage, multinucleation, abnormalities of mitochondrial cristae, membrane blebbing, holes, cytoplasmic extrusions and formation of apoptotic bodies as confirmed collectively by double staining of AO/PI, SEM and TEM. Statistical analysis (two-tailed t-test) of differential counting of 200 cells under fluorescence microscope revealed significant difference in apoptotic cells populations between treated and untreated HeLa cells. In addition, ZER has increased the cellular level of caspase-3 on the treated HeLa cells. It could be concluded that ZER was able to produce distinctive morphological features of cell death that corresponds to apoptosis.

1. Introduction

Natural products provide a great chemical structural diversity. In this respect, sesquiterpines have been demonstrated to stimulate cytotoxicity and apoptosis in several cancer cell lines at low micromolar concentrations with an acceptable clinical range of new anticancer drugs [1, 2]. Sesquiterpene have been found abundantly in Zingiber zerumbet, a plant which is commonly found in Malaysia [3, 4]. Z. zerumbet has significant economic properties, as the rhizome can be used as both a spice and a traditional medicine. Zerumbone (ZER: Figure 1) is a monosesquiterpine, which is recognized as a main compound of this plant. ZER has shown antiproliferative effects on different cancer cell lines such as HT-29, CaCo-2, and HepG2 cancer cells, with extra investigations on apoptosis pathway and G2/M cell cycle arrest [5, 6]. Moreover, cytotoxic effects of ZER have been reported to be selective toward cancer cells compared to normal cells [4, 7]. Furthermore, the compound has shown potential in vivo chemopreventive properties on experimental skin cancer in mouse [8], colon cancer in rats [9], and cervical intraepithelial neoplasia in Balb/c mice [10]. In addition, ZER has shown anti-inflammatory (anticycloxygenase-2), suppression of free radical generation, anticholinesterase, iNOS expression, and TNF-a release [9, 11, 12].

Cervical cancer remains a critical public health problem that is second only to breast cancer in overall disease burden for women throughout the world [13]. This cancer has been targeted by researchers to discover new anticancer drugs that can replace the current unsafe regimens for such disease [14]. Natural products are suitable alternatives that can be used instead of platinum-based drugs in control of cervical cancer, which show some harmful side effects [15]; however, a recent study has demonstrated that ZER is significantly less harmful when tested on human peripheral blood lymphocytes compared to cisplatin [16]. On the other hand, ZER inhibited the proliferation of several cancer cell lines, while the growth of Chang normal liver cells, normalhuman dermal (2F0-C25), and colon (CCD-18 Co) fibroblasts wasless affected [4, 17]. With regards to the cytoselective toxicity and the versatile biological activities of this compound, the present study was suggested to explore its antiproliferative effects and the apoptogenic ontogeny on different cancer cells and human cervical cancer cell (HeLa), respectively.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Isolation and Characterization of ZER

ZER was isolated using the hydrodistillation (steam distillation) method. Briefly, fresh rhizomes of Z. zerumbet were initially cleaned and sliced and later placed in a glass flask containing distilled water and heated immediately using the heating mantel. The flask was immediately connected to special glassware (Dienstag) in order to collect vaporized steam containing the volatile oil. Then volatile oil was crystallized using circulating cool water. The crystals were collected and used. To obtain highly pure ZER, recrystalization was performed using hexane and the solution was left standing to evaporate. Thin layer chromatography was used to examine purification of ZER at each step. The crystals of ZER were kept for further chemical and pharmacological analyses.

2.2. ZER Structure Elucidation by NMR

Five milligrams of ZER crystals were dissolved in HPLC-grade methanol and the sample was subsequently sent for (nuclear magnetic resonance) NMR analysis at the laboratory of Natural Products, Institute of Bioscience, UPM. 1Hydrogen and 13Carbon NMR spectra were recorded in Varian Unity Inova spectrometer operated at 500 MHz, and the chemical shifts of the respective compound were reported in ppm.

2.3. Cell Culture and MTT Cytotoxicity Assay

Human cancer cell lines of cervix (HeLa), ovary (Coav-3) and breast (MCF-7), and Chinese Hamster ovary normal cells were obtained from American Type Culture Collection (ATCC, Va, USA). ATCC protocol recommended the use of RPMI 1640 (PAA, Cölbe, Germany) as a media for culturing cells. Disposable items (75 mL tissue culture flask, filter system, well plates) were purchased from (NUNC, Roskilde, Denmark). Trypsin EDTA, feotal calf serum, amphotericin B, and penicillin streptomycin were obtained from FlowLab (Australia). The microtetrazolium (MTT) powder was purchased from Amresco, Ohio, USA, and the dimethylsulphoxide (DMSO) was purchased from Sigma Aldrich, Germany.

Cells were trypsinized and counted using hemocytometer and plated in a microtiter plate of 96 wells. After an overnight incubation to allow cells attachment, medium was changed and 0.2 mL of new supplemented medium was added in each well. Cells were then treated in a dose- and time-dependent manners, with zerumbone, 0.1% ethanol (negative control), and cisplatin (positive control), and were incubated at 37 , 5% CO2 for 72 hours. Each concentration of the compounds was assayed in triplicates. MTT assay reading was performed using ELISA plate reader (TECAN, SunriseTM, Männedorf, Switzerland).

2.4. Colorimetric Assays of Caspase-3

The colorimetric protease assay of caspase-3 provides a simple and convenient means for quantifying the enzyme activity that recognize the amino acid sequence, DEVD (a synthetic tetrapeptide, (Asp-Glue-Val-Asp), which is the upstream amino acid sequence of the caspase-3 cleavage site), coupled with p-nitroanilide, which is released upon substrate cleavage. This assay was performed using commercial kit (ApoTarget kit, code: KHZ0022: BioSource International, Inc., Calif, USA). 2 106 cells were treated with IC50 of ZER and incubated for 72 hours while untreated cells acted as control. The cells were lysed by the addition of 50  L of chilled cell lysis buffer and incubated on ice for 10 minutes. The resulting cell lysate was centrifuged for 1 minute at 10 000  g, and the supernatant was collected. Fifty microliters of 2X reaction buffer (containing 10 mM DTT) were added to each sample. Then 5  L of DEVD-pNA (caspase-3 substrate) was added and incubated in the dark at 37 for 1 hour. At the end of the incubation period, the samples were read at 405 nm in a microplate reader (TECAN, SunriseTM, Männedorf, Switzerland). Data was presented as optical density (405 nm; mean SD).

2.5. Quantification of Apoptosis Using Propidium Iodide and Acridine Orange Double Staining

ZER-induced cell death in HeLa cancer cells was quantified using propidium iodide (PI) and acridine-orange (AO) double staining according to standard procedures and examine under fluorescence microscope (Lieca attached with Q-Floro Software) [18, 19]. Briefly, treatment was carried out in a 25 mL culture flask (Nunc). HeLa cells were plated at concentration of 1 106 cell/mL, and treated with ZER at IC50 concentration. Flasks were incubated in atmosphere of 5% CO2 at 37 for 24, 48, and 72 hours. The cells were then spun down at 1000 rpm for 10 minutes. Supernatant was discarded and the cells were washed twice using phosphate buffer saline (PBS) after centrifuging at 1000 rpm for 10 minutes to remove the remaining media. Ten microliters of fluorescent dyes containing acridine orange (AO, 10 μg/mL) and propidium iodide (PI, 10 μg/mL) were added into the cellular pellet at equal volumes of each. Freshly stained cell suspension was dropped into a glass slide and covered by coverslip. Slides were observed under UV-fluorescence microscope within 30 minutes before the fluorescence color starts to fade. The percentages of viable, apoptotic, and necrotic cells were determined in more than 200 cells. Acridine orange (AO) and propidium iodide (PI) are intercalating nucleic acid specific fluorochromes which emit green and orange fluorescences, respectively, when they are bound to DNA. Of the two, only AO can cross the plasma membrane of viable and early apoptotic cells. Viewed by fluorescence microscopy, viable cells appear to have green nucleus with intact structure while apoptotic cells exhibit a bright-green nucleus showing condensation of chromatin as dense green areas. Late apoptotic cells and necrotic cells will stain with both AO and PI. Comparatively, PI produces the highest intensity emission. Hence, late apoptotic cells exhibited an orange nucleus showing condensation of chromatin whilst necrotic cells display an orange nucleus with intact structure. This assay provides a useful quantitative evaluation and was done three times (n = 3).

2.6. Transmission Unltrastructural Effects of ZER on Hela Cells (TEM)

HeLa cancer cells were cultured with the IC50 of ZER and cisplatin and incubated for 24, 48, and 72 hours at 37 . The cultured cells were harvested using trypsin and centrifuged for 10 minutes at 3500 rpm and room temperature. The pellets were fixed in 4% (v/v) glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M coccadylate buffer (pH 7.4) for 4 hours at 4 . The fixed cells were centrifuged, and the pellets were blocked in serum which was later fixed in glutaraldeyde overnight at 4 . The specimens were washed in three changes of sodium coccadylate buffer (pH 7.4) for 10 minutes each, postfixed in 1% osmium tetraoxide at 4 . The specimens were then washed in three changes of sodium coccadylate buffer (pH 7.4) for 10 minutes each and dehydrated with a graded series of acetone (35%, 50%, 75%, 95%, and 100%). The cells were then infiltrated with acetone and resin and embedded with 100% resin in beam capsule, and left to polymerize at 60 for 48 hours. The area of interest in the embedded cells resin block was chosen using the toulidine blue staining and later examined using light microscope. The selected area was cut in ulltrathin sections using ultramicrotome. The sections were placed into a grid and stained with uranyl acetate for 10 minutes followed by 50% filtered acetone, and finally stained using lead which was then washed twice with distilled water. The stained samples were then viewed under transmission electron microscopy (Phillips, Eindhoven, The Netherlands).

2.7. Exterior Unltrastructural Effects of ZER on Hela Cells (SEM)

The IC50 of ZER was used to induce death toward human cervical cancer cell lines (HeLa). HeLa cells were cultured for 24, 48, and 72 hours. The cancer cells were trypsinized and centrifuged for 10 minutes at 3000 rpm. The pellets were fixed in 4% (v/v) glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M coccadylate buffer (pH 7.4) for 4 hours, 4 . The fixed cells were washed in three changes of sodium coccadylate buffer for 10 minutes each, postfixed in 1% osmium tetraoxide at 4 . The specimens were then washed in three changes of sodium coccadylate buffer (pH 7.4) for 10 minutes each, dehydrated in ascending grades of acetone 35%, 50%, 75%, 95%, and 100%), and brought to critical point of drying by the critical point drier (CPD 030, Bal-TEC, Switzerland) for thirty minutes. The cells were affixed to a metal SEM stub and sputter coated in gold by using SEM coating unit (E5100 Polaron, UK). The coated specimens were viewed using scanning electron microscopy (JOEL 64000, Japan) at accelerating voltage of 15–25 KV.

2.8. Statistical Analysis

Data was expressed as mean ± SEM (mean ± SD). Normality and homogeneity of variance assumptions were checked. One way ANOVA followed by pairwise comparison analysis was used when needed. Independent t-test was used to analyze the data of the colorimetric assay of caspase. SPSS 16.0 was utilized to conduct statistical analysis. The value of 0.05 was considered as the cutoff point of type one error (alpha).

3. Results

3.1. 13C NMR and 1H NMR Analyses of ZER

NMR analyses were performed to verify the chemical structure of ZER before conducting further biological investigations. 1H-NMR spectrum showed four singlets which resonate at 1.573, 1.770, 1.086, and 1.238, and they were due to the methyl group at carbon C-12, C-13, C-14, and C-15 (Figure 1). A broad duplet was found between 6.083 and 6.106 at C-6 position. Three multiplets between 2.243 and 2.544 were attributed to the methylene groups at positions C-1, C-4, and C-5, respectively. The 13C-NMR spectrum gave a total of fifteen carbons. The most downfield signal at 205.528 was due to the carbonyl group at position C-8. The signals of methyl group at positions C-12, C-13, C-14, and C-15 were observed at 14.228, 10.724, 23.360, and 28.659, respectively. These 1H-NMR and 13C-NMR analyses coincide to the chemical structure that resembles ZER (Figure 1).

3.2. Cytotoxic Effects of ZER on Normal and Cancer Cells

As depicted in Table 1, ZER was clearly found to exert antiproliferative effects toward HeLa, Coav-3, and MCF-7. The IC50 value, which is the concentration required for 50% growth inhibition, is determined to be , , or M against HeLa, Coav-3, or MCF-7, respectively. Comparatively, the anti-neoplastic drug, cisplatin, was used as a positive control in this study. Cisplatin revealed an inhibitory effect on HeLa, MCF-7, and Coav-3 cancer cells with IC50 values of , , and M, respectively. ZER reveals a lower cytotoxicity (High IC50) toward normal cells Chinese hamster ovary (Table 1).

3.3. Colorimetric Assay of Caspase-3

Since HeLa were the most sensitive cells to ZER, an in vitro colorimetric assay of caspase-3 was conducted to assess apoptosis between control and treated cells. As shown in Figure 2, ZER significantly (independent t-test, P < .05) stimulated caspase-3, the hallmark enzyme of apoptosis. The level of this enzyme is higher in treated HeLa cells as compared to nontreated cells, this concludes that ZER induces cell death toward human cervical cancer cells, HeLa.

3.4. Quantification of Apoptosis Using Propidium Iodide and Acridine Orange Double Stainin

Apoptotic, necrotic, and viable HeLa cells were scored under fluorescence microscope. This is also included the control cells (untreated) whereby, 200 cells were randomly and differentially counted. The study revealed that ZER triggered morphological features that relates to apoptosis in a time-dependent manner (Figures 3(a), 3(b), 3(c), and 3(d)). Whereby, early apoptosis is obvious by intercalated AO within the fragmented DNA. In several of such cases, the fluorescent bright-green color could be seen in treated HeLa cells only. In contrast, untreated cells were observed with a green intact nuclear structure. At 48-hour treatment with ZER, blebbing and nuclear margination were noticed (moderate apoptosis). In addition, late stages of apoptosis, such as apoptotic body separation and presence of reddish-orange color due to the binding of AO to denatured DNA, were observed after 72-hour treatment with ZER. Differential scoring of treated HeLa cells (200 cells population) showed that there is a statistical significant (P < .05) difference in apoptosis positive cells, which indicates clearly that ZER has a time-dependent apoptogenic effect. On the other hand, there was no statistical significant (P > .05) difference in necrotic counts at different treatment times (24, 48, and 72 hours) (Figure 4).

3.5. Effects of ZER on Human Cervical Cancer Cells (Hela) Using Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM)

The surface ultrastructure of HeLa cells treated with ZER was examined. Interpretation of SEM electromicrographs showed distinct morphological changes corresponding to a typical cellular surface morphology of apoptosis, including cell membrane blebbing, microvilli disappearance or reduction (Blunt microvillus), and separated apoptotic bodies. The effects of ZER on HeLa cells were found to be time-correlated phenomena (Figures 5(b), 5(c), and 5(d)) and this was noticed when considering the number of blebs (cytoplasmic extension) as an indicator of cell death via apoptosis. Untreated HeLa cells have shown a restoration of the typical morphological features of cervical cancer cells which include numerous microvilli on its surface with membrane connections (Figure 5(a)). However, occasional existence of rounded cells and blebbing on the cell surface are characteristics of HeLa cells in culture but this phenomenon is not rampant. Although a few cells from the control groups resembled those from treated groups, ZER caused morphological alterations in a larger proportion of cells.

3.6. Effects of ZER on Cervical Human Cancer Cells (Hela) Using Transmission Electron Microscopy

ZER-treated HeLa cells showed death corresponded very well to the cross-sectional classical signs of apoptosis: cell shrinkage, increased cellular granularity, the formation of apoptotic bodies, and dilated nuclear membranes (Figures 6(b), 6(d), and 6(e)). Mitochondrial cristae in ZER-treated cancer cells were ruptured and condensed (Figure 6(c)). The evidences which suggested that the apoptogenic effect of ZER on HeLa cells is time-dependent manner were obtained through observation of dynamic micrographs images using transmission electron microscopy. The initial induction of cell death indicates primary (early) stage of apoptosis that involved cell shrinkage and chromatin condensation. Nuclear membrane dilatation and cell membrane blebbing (Figure 6(d)) were the next stage in this sequence of apoptosis followed by nuclear collapse and continual blebbing stage (48 hours). HeLa cells treated with ZER after 72 hours were observed to show late stages of apoptosis phenomena, which included apoptotic bodies formation (Figure 6(e)). Cisplatin-treated HeLa cells have shown similar morphological aspects of apoptosis, however, with fewer necrotic characteristics also observed.

4. Discussion

The results of current study reveal that zerumbone possesses promising antiproliferative properties against HeLa, MCF-7, and Coav-3 cancer cells. However, the lowest IC50 of ZER is obtained toward human cervical cancer cells (HeLa); therefore all investigations regarding the apoptogenic property of this natural product were carried on this cell line. On the other hand, ZER has shown a weaker cytotoxic effect on normal cells of CHO. These cytoselective properties of ZER have been reported earlier [4, 17].

Apoptosis is biological phenomena that involved in process ranging from embryogenesis to ageing, from normal tissue homoeostasis to many human diseases. Apoptotic cells share a number of common features such as cell shrinkage, nuclear condensation, membrane blebbing, chromatin cleavage, and formation of pyknotic bodies of condensed chromatin [20, 21]. These distinctive morphological features form the basis of some of the most widely used techniques for the identification and quantification of apoptosis, and thus morphologic description using light or electron microscopy remains one of the best ways to define apoptosis [21]. The programmed cell death (apoptosis) compared to necrosis is a desired somatic defense mechanism against cancer cells [22]. Moreover, apoptosis is reported earlier to be triggered by natural products [23, 24]. Zerumbone is one of the promising natural products that possess potentiality to induce apoptosis on different cancer cell lines [25]. The current study was intended to provide an evidence of apoptosis on HeLa cells induced by ZER.

Cancer cell death phenomenon could be induced through different pathways [26]. A major part of this phenomenon could be mediated by caspase-3, the promoter of apoptosis [27]. This enzyme could be measured in vitro using colorimetric assay that recognize the amino acid sequence, DEVD, coupled with p-nitroanilide, which is released upon substrate cleavage and can be detected at 405 nm. This approach of measuring the caspases has been used previously in HeLa cells [28]. The present study revealed that ZER induced significantly (two-tailed t-test, P < .05) the elevation of caspase-3 on HeLa as compared to untreated HeLa cells. These findings confirmed that ZER is capable of inducing apoptosis in HeLa cells by stimulating the enzymes that play a central role in the initiation of apoptosis. At this moment of writing, this study is the first to demonstrate that caspase-3 activation is required for ZER-induced apoptosis in human cervical cancer cells (HeLa).

Nucleic acid specific fluorochromes emit fluorescent color when bound to DNA and this phenomenon can be viewed under fluorescence microscopy [18, 19]. The fluorescent color of that stain is obtained by specific properties of different flourostain such as the ability to cross plasma membrane of viable cells and dead cells [18]. Using properties of AO/PI, HeLa cells were treated with ZER to study the antiproliferative and apoptogenic effects of ZER. The antiproliferative properties of ZER could then be evaluated by counting the numbers of viable cancer cells, while the apoptogenic effects were determined through observing typical morphological changes of apoptosis. This technique was previously applied to human colonic adenocarcinoma cells treated with ZER [11] and also toward HeLa treated with different compounds [29]. The cell viability results showed an obvious decrease of living cells in ZER-treated group. HeLa cells with ZER stimulation had typical morphological changes that implicate apoptosis such as DNA fragmentation, membrane blebbing, and apoptotic body formation, which could be evidenced by the visual bright-green and orange color of AO color of stained cells under fluorescence microscopy. Apoptotic cells exhibit bright-green nucleus showing condensation of chromatin as dense-green areas. Quantification of apoptosis with differential scoring of treated and control HeLa cells revealed a significant (P < .05) difference in the number of apoptotic cells in a time-dependent manner but with insignificant difference between numbers of necrosis positive cells in control and treated cells, concluding that ZER did not induce necrotic effects. Confocal microscopy examination confirmed the onset of apoptosis features. These morphological criteria that implicate apoptotic cell death were further confirmed by scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy.

Apoptosis possesses distinctive morphological features which form the basis of some of the most widely used techniques for the identification and quantification of apoptosis. Thus, morphologic description of apoptosis using electron microscopy still remains one of the best ways to define apoptosis and to contrast it with necrosis [21]. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) has been applied previously to study surface ultrastructural morphology of HeLa cells [25, 30]. In the current investigation, SEM was employed to obtain detailed information about the cell surface of HeLa upon treatment with ZER at IC50 in a time-dependent manner (0, 24, 48, and 72 hours). SEM electromicrographs showed distinct morphological changes that correspond to a typical cellular surface morphology implicating apoptosis, including cell membrane blebbing, microvilli disappearance or reduction (blunt microvillus), and separated apoptotic bodies after treatment. These findings were similar that confirms to previous reported cytological features of HeLa cells undergoing apoptosis [30]. Untreated HeLa cells have shown a restoration of the typical morphological features of cervical cancer cells, which included numerous microvilli (hairing rods) on the cell surface with membrane connections. These results strongly provide evidence that ZER has promising anticancer activity toward human cervical cancer based on the observation of distinctive morphological features to surface HeLa cells upon treatment with ZER.

In this study, the ultrastructural changes in HeLa cells after treatment with ZER were studied using transmission electron microscopy (TEM). TEM has been utilized commonly as the tool to study the morphological ultrastructure of cells [31]. The application of TEM technology is also used in the detection of associated cellular microlesions of apoptosis and cell cycle arrest [32, 33]. In addition, TEM allows the opportunity to view cytoplasmic changes [34] which cannot be viewed using SEM. TEM is a powerful technique for differentiating between apoptosis and necrosis [35], allows the analysis of sectioned specimens, and provides a qualitative bidimensional image of the inner cell, often after fixation, embedding, and staining [36, 37]. The TEM electromicrograph exhibited defined chromatin margination, followed by the cell compaction toward the nuclear periphery. In the residual diffuse chromatin, remnants of deeply modified nucleoli can still be revealed in treated HeLa cells. The nucleus appears strongly rearranged, if compared to normal, which the later shows uncondensed heterochromatin, clearly distinguishable from the diffuse interchromatin of treated cells. Plasma membrane and organelles are preserved for long, except for cytosol condensation and blebbing phenomena, which characterize apoptotic models. Subsequently, the nucleus generates numerous compact electron dense micronuclei, frequently released in the extracellular space. Cell splitting in a number of apoptotic bodies represents generally the final stage of apoptosis.

Apoptosis as a desired biodefense cell death can be induced in cancer tissues [38]. This induction is made possible using natural products from a variety of plants-derived compounds [39]. One of these natural compounds of plant derived is terpenoids [40], which included mono-, sesqui-, di-, and triterpenoids. These biocompounds are synthesized by tandem reactions of the phosphorylated isoprene unit [41]. Some of these dietary compounds possess chemopreventive properties that have been proven in vivo and in vitro. For example, d-limonene from the peel oil of orange or lemon has a chemopreventive activity against mammary, skin, liver, lung, and fore stomach carcinogenesis [42]. Clinical trials results also demonstrated that some terpenoids have the potentiality for treating cancers without major toxicity [43]. Thus, further understanding of their biological and physiological mechanisms may lead to the identification of more effective compounds in this category for the prevention and treatment of targeted cancer types. ZER (mono-sesquiterpene) has been reported previously to induce apoptosis in several cancer cell lines such as liver cancer [4] and leukemia cell lines [25]. ZER has also been reported having the capability to induce apoptotic and morphological changes in different types of leukemic cells [44]. On the other hand, ZER has shown less cytotoxic effect on normal Chang liver cells, normal human dermal (2F0-C25), and colon (CCD-18 Co) fibroblasts [4, 17]. The current results of this study are in agreement with previous studies in terms of the potential anticancer of this compound and the typical features of apoptosis of HeLa [4, 14, 20]. This current study of using TEM technique has been concluded for the first time, the compound ZER, having promising anticancer activity toward HeLa cancer cells. In addition, TEM has never been used and reported before to include the study that relates to ultrastructural changes occurring to the HeLa cancer cells upon treatment by ZER.

It has been reported that zerumbone inhibits the proliferation of cancer cells, while having less effect on normal-cell proliferation [17]. This report pointed to the α,β-unsaturated carbonyl group in ZER as the likely source of the activity, and this group may play an important role. The α,β-unsaturated carbonyl group effectively removes the intracellular Glutathione (GSH) by forming the Michael adduct with it, thereby raising intracellular redox potential (E), which in turn stops the proliferation of the cancer cells [45, 46]. However, average intracellular redox potential of normal fibroblasts is about −220 mV, and that in proliferating fibrosarcoma cells is about −210 mV, this difference could explained the weaker effect of ZER on the proliferation of normal cells. There is, thus, a margin of ~10 mV in the adjustability of E between these normal cells and the cancer cells [45, 46].

In conclusion, ZER has stronger cytotoxic effects toward cancer cells compared to normal cells. This compound can stimulate apoptosis of HeLa cells. ZER would have a bright future in the treatment of tumors and further work may lead to relative antitumor agents to be used in clinical settings.

Acknowledgments

This research was funded in part by the National Cancer Council (MAKNA), Malaysia. The authors also acknowledge additional support from Universiti Putra Malaysia (UPM), Serdang, Malaysia (Grant no. RUGS 91143).