Low‐level laser therapy can produce increased aggressiveness of dysplastic and oral cancer cell lines by modulation of Akt/mTOR signaling pathway — Felipe Fornias Sperandio (2013) | RDL Network
Low‐level laser therapy can produce increased aggressiveness of dysplastic and oral cancer cell lines by modulation of Akt/mTOR signaling pathway
Article 2013 en
Authors
FS
Felipe Fornias Sperandio
FG
Fernanda Salgueiredo Giudice
LC
Luciana Côrrea
Abstract
1 min read
Low-level laser therapy (LLLT) is a non-thermal phototherapy used in several medical applications, including wound healing, reduction of pain and amelioration of oral mucositis. Nevertheless, the effects of LLLT upon cancer or dysplastic cells have been so far poorly studied. Head and neck cancer patients receiving LLLT for oral mucositis, for example, might have remaining tumor cells that could be stimulated by LLLT. This study demonstrated that LLLT (GaAlAs--660 nm or 780 nm, 40 mW, 2.05, 3.07 or 6.15 J/cm²) can modify oral dysplastic cells (DOK) and oral cancer cells (SCC9 and SCC25) growth by modulating the Akt/mTOR/CyclinD1 signaling pathway; LLLT significantly modified the expression of proteins related to progression and invasion in all the cell lines, and could aggravate oral cancer cellular behavior, increasing the expression of pAkt, pS6 and Cyclin D1 proteins and producing an aggressive Hsp90 isoform. Apoptosis was detected for SCC25 and was related to pAkt levels.
Cláudio Daniel Cerdeira, Maı́sa Ribeiro Pereira Lima Brigagão, Marina Lara de Carli, Cláudia de Souza Ferreira, Gabriel de Oliveira Isac Moraes, Henrique Hadad, João Adolfo Costa Hanemann, Michael R Hamblin, Felipe Fornias Sperandio
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