Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Kausik Bishayee is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Kausik Bishayee.


Cell Proliferation | 2013

Quercetin induces cytochrome‐c release and ROS accumulation to promote apoptosis and arrest the cell cycle in G2/M, in cervical carcinoma: signal cascade and drug‐DNA interaction

Kausik Bishayee; Samrat Ghosh; Avinaba Mukherjee; Ratan Sadhukhan; J. Mondal; Anisur Rahman Khuda-Bukhsh

Small aromatic compounds like flavonoids can intercalate with DNA molecules bringing about conformational changes leading to reduced replication and transcription. Here, we have examined one dietary flavonoid, quercetin (found in many fruit and vegetables), for possible anti‐cancer effects, on HeLa cells originally derived from a case of human cervical cancer.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2012

(6)-Gingerol induces caspase 3 dependent apoptosis and autophagy in cancer cells: Drug-DNA interaction and expression of certain signal genes in HeLa cells

Debrup Chakraborty; Kausik Bishayee; Samrat Ghosh; Raktim Biswas; Sushil Kumar Mandal; Anisur Rahman Khuda-Bukhsh

[6]-Gingerol, a pharmacologically important bioactive component of ginger, has been reported to have anti-hyperglycemic, anti-cancer and anti-oxidative properties, but mechanisms through which these are achieved are largely unclear. The present study focuses on apoptosis and autophagy, two key events of anti-cancer activity, in HeLa cells treated with [6]-gingerol. The treated cells showed several morphological changes, including externalization of phosphatidyl serine, degradation of DNA and increase in TUNEL positivity. Furthermore, there was depolarization of mitochondrial membrane potential, providing evidence of mitochondria mediated apoptosis. The expression of caspase 3 and PARP was increased in cells exposed to [6]-gingerol. Circular dichroism study for testing drug-DNA interaction with both calf thymus and nuclear DNA as target revealed that the drug had potential to bind with the nuclear DNA and induce conformational changes of DNA. The over-expression of NFkβ, AKT and Bcl2 genes in cancer cells was down-regulated by [6]-gingerol treatment. On the other hand the expression levels of TNFα, Bax and cytochrome c were enhanced in [6]-gingerol treated cells. Thus, overall results suggest that [6]-gingerol has potential to bind with DNA and induce cell death by autophagy and caspase 3 mediated apoptosis.


Acta Biochimica et Biophysica Sinica | 2013

5-lipoxygenase antagonist therapy: a new approach towards targeted cancer chemotherapy.

Kausik Bishayee; Anisur Rahman Khuda-Bukhsh

Leukotrienes are the bioactive group of fatty acids and major constituents of arachidonic acid metabolism molded by the catalytic activity of 5-lipoxygenase (5-LOX). Evidence is accumulating in support of the direct involvement of 5-LOX in the progression of different types of cancer including prostate, lung, colon, and colorectal cancers. Several independent studies now support the correlation between the 5-LOX expression and cancer cell viability, proliferation, cell migration, invasion through extracellular matrix destruction, metastasis, and activation of anti-apoptotic signaling cascades. The involvement of epidermal growth factor receptor and 5-oxo-ETE receptor (OXER1) is the major talking point in the downstream of the 5-LOX pathway, which relates the cancer cells to the proliferative pathways. Antisense technology approaches and use of different kinds of blocker targeted to 5-LOX, FLAP (5-LOX-activating protein), and OXER1 have shown a greater efficiency in combating different cancer cell types. Lastly, suppression of 5-LOX activity that reduces the cell proliferation activity also induces intrinsic mitochondrial apoptotic pathway in either p53-dependent or independent manner. Pharmacological agents that specifically inhibit the LOX-mediated signaling pathways have been used during last few years to treat inflammatory diseases such as asthma and arthritis. Studies of these well-characterized agents are therefore warranted for their use as possible candidates for chemotherapeutic studies against the killer disease cancer.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2013

Lycopodine triggers apoptosis by modulating 5-lipoxygenase, and depolarizing mitochondrial membrane potential in androgen sensitive and refractory prostate cancer cells without modulating p53 activity: signaling cascade and drug-DNA interaction.

Kausik Bishayee; Debrup Chakraborty; Samrat Ghosh; Naoual Boujedaini; Anisur Rahman Khuda-Bukhsh

When the prostate cancer cells become unresponsive to androgen therapy, resistance to chemotherapy becomes imminent, resulting in high mortality. To combat this situation, lycopodine, a pharmacologically important bioactive component derived from Lycopodium clavatum spores, was tested against hormone sensitive (LnCaP) and refractory (PC3) prostate cancer cells in vitro. This study aims to check if lycopodine has demonstrable anti-cancer effects and if it has, to find out the possible mechanism of its action. The MTT assay was performed to evaluate the cytotoxic effect. Depolarization of mitochondrial membrane potential, cell cycle, EGF receptor activity and apoptosis were recorded by FACS; profiles of different anti- and pro-apoptotic genes and their products were studied by semi-quantitative RT-PCR, indirect-ELISA, western blotting. Drug-DNA interaction was determined by CD spectroscopy. Administration of lycopodine down-regulated the expression of 5-lipoxygenase and the 5-oxo-ETE receptor (OXE receptor1) and EGF receptor, and caused up-regulation of cytochrome c with depolarization of mitochondrial inner membrane potential, without palpable change in p53 activity, resulting in apoptosis, cell arrest at G0/G1 stage and ultimately reduced proliferation of cancer cells; concomitantly, there was externalization of phosphotidyl serine residues. CD spectroscopic analysis revealed intercalating property of lycopodine with DNA molecule, implicating its ability to block cellular DNA synthesis. The overall results suggest that lycopodine is a promising candidate suitable for therapeutic use as an anti-cancer drug.


Journal of Integrative Medicine | 2013

Diarylheptanoid–myricanone isolated from ethanolic extract of Myrica cerifera shows anticancer effects on HeLa and PC3 cell lines: signalling pathway and drug-DNA interaction

Avijit Paul; Sreemanti Das; Jayeeta Das; Asmita Samadder; Kausik Bishayee; Ratan Sadhukhan; Anisur Rahman Khuda-Bukhsh

OBJECTIVE To test if myricanone (C21H24O5), a cyclic diarylheptanoid, has anticancer effects on two different cancer cell lines HeLa and PC3. The present study was conducted with a note on the drug-DNA interaction and apoptotic signalling pathway. METHODS Several studies like cytotoxicity, nuclear damage, annexin-V-fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)/propidium iodide (PI)-labelled apoptotic assay and cell cycle arrest, immunoblot and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) were used following standard protocols. Circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy was also done to evaluate whether myricanone effectively interacted with DNA to bring about conformational changes that could strongly inhibit the cancer cell proliferation. RESULTS Myricanone showed a greater cytotoxic effect on PC3 cells than on HeLa cells. Myricanone promoted G0/G1 arrest in HeLa cells and S phase arrest in PC3 cells. Nuclear condensation and annexin V-FITC/PI studies revealed that myricanone promoted apoptotic cell death. CD spectroscopic data indicated that myricanone had an interaction with calf thymus DNA that changed DNA structural conformation. RT-PCR and immunoblot studies revealed that myricanone activated the apoptotic signalling cascades through down-regulation of transcription factors like nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) (p65), and signal transducers and activators of transcription 3 (STAT3); cell cycle regulators like cyclin D1, and survivin and other signal proteins like Bcl-2 and up-regulation of Bax, caspase-9 and caspase-3. CONCLUSION Myricanone induced apoptosis in both types of cancer cells by triggering caspase activation, and suppression of cell proliferation by down-regulation of NF-κB and STAT3 signalling cascades, which makes it a suitable candidate for possible use in the formulation of therapeutic agent for combating cancer.


Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry | 2013

Condurango-glycoside-A fraction of Gonolobus condurango induces DNA damage associated senescence and apoptosis via ROS-dependent p53 signalling pathway in HeLa cells

Kausik Bishayee; Avijit Paul; Samrat Ghosh; Sourav Sikdar; Avinaba Mukherjee; Raktim Biswas; Naoual Boujedaini; Anisur Rahman Khuda-Bukhsh

Gonolobus condurango plant extract is used as an anticancer drug in some traditional systems of medicine including homeopathy, but it apparently lacks any scientific validation. Further, no detailed study is available to suggest whether condurango-glycoside-A (CGA), a major ingredient of condurango serves as a potent anticancer compound. Therefore, we investigated apoptosis-inducing ability of CGA against cervix carcinoma cells (HeLa). β-galactosidase-activity and DNA damage were critically studied at different time points; while induced DNA-damage was observed at 9–12th hours, senescence of cells appeared at a later stage (18th hour after CGA treatment), implicating thereby a possible role of DNA damage in inducing pre-mature cell senescence. Concurrently, the number of cells undergoing apoptosis increased along with increase in reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation. Expression of p53 was also up-regulated, indicating that apoptosis could have been mediated through p53 pathway. DCHFDA (4′,6-Diamidino-2-phenylindole dihydrochloride) assay, acridine orange/ethidium bromide staining and annexin V/PI assay results collectively confirmed that apoptosis was induced by increased ROS generation. Reduction in proliferation of cells was further evidenced by the cell cycle arrest at G0/G1 stage. Expression profiles of certain relevant genes and proteins like p53, Akt, Bcl-2, Bax, cytochrome c and caspase 3 also provided evidence of ROS mediated p53 up-regulation and further boost in Bax expression and followed by cytochrome c release and activation of caspase 3. Overall results suggest that CGA initiates ROS generation, promoting up-regulation of p53 expression, thus resulting in apoptosis and pre-mature senescence associated with DNA damage.


Phytotherapy Research | 2014

Graveoline Isolated from Ethanolic Extract of Ruta graveolens Triggers Apoptosis and Autophagy in Skin Melanoma Cells: A Novel Apoptosis‐Independent Autophagic Signaling Pathway

Samrat Ghosh; Kausik Bishayee; Anisur Rahman Khuda-Bukhsh

Anti‐cancer drugs generally kill cancer cells by apoptosis but fail to do so when they become resistant and escape apoptosis signals. But these resistant cells can still be killed by autophagy. Therefore, drugs having both apoptotic and autophagic abilities are solicited in effective cancer management. In search of such a drug, we examined the efficacy of graveoline, a bioactive compound isolated from Ruta graveolens on skin melanoma A375 cells through the use of specific signaling cascades and their inhibitors. Cytotoxicity of graveoline was tested by conducting MTT assay. Induction of autophagy and apoptosis was checked. Expression of related proteins and their localization were studied by conducting immunoblot assay and through confocal microscopy, respectively. We found graveoline‐induced Beclin‐1 associated autophagy in A375 cells and 3‐methyladenine, an inhibitor of autophagy did not affect apoptosis. Conversely, caspase inhibitor that blocked apoptosis did not affect autophagic cell death, suggesting thereby that these two were independent events. Use of reactive oxygen species (ROS) scavengers inhibited cell death, but blocking autophagy did not affect graveoline‐induced ROS generation, suggesting that ROS generation ensued autophagy. Thus, graveoline‐induced both apoptotic and autophagic cell death in skin melanoma cells, a desirable quality in effective anti‐cancer drug design. Copyright


Journal of Integrative Medicine | 2014

Low doses of ethanolic extract of Boldo (Peumus boldus) can ameliorate toxicity generated by cisplatin in normal liver cells of mice in vivo and in WRL-68 cells in vitro, but not in cancer cells in vivo or in vitro

Jesmin Mondal; Kausik Bishayee; Ashis Kumar Panigrahi; Anisur Rahman Khuda-Bukhsh

OBJECTIVE Use of cisplatin, a conventional anticancer drug, is restricted because it generates strong hepatotoxicity by accumulating in liver. Therefore its anticancer potential can only be fully exploited if its own toxicity is considerably reduced. Towards this goal, ethanolic extract of the plant, Boldo (Peumus boldus), known for its antihepatotoxic effects, was used simultaneously with cisplatin, to test its ability to reduce cisplatins cytotoxicity without affecting its anticancer potential. METHODS The cytotoxicity of Boldo extract (BE) and cisplatin, administered alone and in combination, was determined in three cancer cell lines (A549, HeLa, and HepG2) and in normal liver cells (WRL-68). Drug-DNA interaction, DNA damage, cell cycle, apoptosis, reactive oxygen species (ROS) and mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP, ΔΨ) were also studied. Hepatotoxicity and antioxidant activity levels were determined by alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase, lactate dehydrogenase and glutathione assays in mice. The cytotoxicity of related proteins was tested by Western blotting. RESULTS Co-administration of BE and cisplatin increased viability of normal cells, but had no effect on the viability of cancer cells. Boldo protected liver from damage and normalized different antioxidant enzyme levels in vivo and also reduced ROS and re-polarized MMP in vitro. Bax and cytochrome c translocation was reduced with caspase 3 down-regulation. Further, a drug-DNA interaction study revealed that BE reduced cisplatins DNA-binding capacity, resulting in a reduction in DNA damage. CONCLUSION Results indicated that a low dose of BE could be used beneficially in combination with cisplatin to reduce its toxicity without hampering cisplatins anticancer effect. These findings signify a potential future use of BE in cancer therapy.


Cell Proliferation | 2014

Flavonol isolated from ethanolic leaf extract of Thuja occidentalis arrests the cell cycle at G2‐M and induces ROS‐independent apoptosis in A549 cells, targeting nuclear DNA

Avinaba Mukherjee; Sourav Sikdar; Kausik Bishayee; N. Boujedaini; Anisur Rahman Khuda-Bukhsh

The K‐ras gene mutation commonly found in lung adenocarcinomas contributes to their non‐invasive expansion. Our main objective here was to develop a chemopreventive agent against K‐ras‐mutated lung adenocarcinoma cell line like‐A549.


Integrative Cancer Therapies | 2013

Antihyperglycemic Drug Gymnema sylvestre Also Shows Anticancer Potentials in Human Melanoma A375 Cells via Reactive Oxygen Species Generation and Mitochondria- Dependent Caspase Pathway

Debrup Chakraborty; Samrat Ghosh; Kausik Bishayee; Avinaba Mukherjee; Sourav Sikdar; Anisur Rahman Khuda-Bukhsh

Objective. Ethanolic extract of Gymnema sylvestre (GS) leaves is used as a potent antidiabetic drug in various systems of alternative medicine, including homeopathy. The present study was aimed at examining if GS also had anticancer potentials, and if it had, to elucidate its possible mechanism of action. Methods. We initially tested possible anticancer potential of GS on A375 cells (human skin melanoma) through MTT assay and determined cytotoxicity levels in A375 and normal liver cells; we then thoroughly studied its apoptotic effects on A375 cells through protocols such as Hoechst 33258, H2DCFDA, and rhodamine 123 staining and conducted ELISA for cytochrome c, caspase 3, and PARP activity levels; we determined the mRNA level expression of cytochrome c, caspase 3, Bcl2, Bax, PARP, ICAD, and EGFR signaling genes through semiquantitative reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and conducted Western blot analysis of caspase 3 and PARP. We also analyzed cell cycle events, determined reactive oxygen species accumulation, measured annexin V-FITC/PI and rhodamine 123 intensity by flow cytometry. Results. Compared with both normal liver cells and drug-untreated A375, the mortality of GS-treated A375 cells increased in a dose-dependent manner. Additionally, GS induced nuclear DNA fragmentation and showed an increased level of mRNA expression of apoptotic signal related genes cytochrome c, caspase 3, PARP, Bax, and reduced expression level of ICAD, EGFR, and the anti-apoptotic gene Bcl2. Conclusion. Overall results indicate GS to have significant anticancer effect on A375 cells apart from its reported antidiabetic effect, indicating possibility of its palliative use in patients with symptoms of both the diseases.

Collaboration


Dive into the Kausik Bishayee's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Anisur Rahman Khuda-Bukhsh

Kalyani Government Engineering College

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Samrat Ghosh

Kalyani Government Engineering College

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Avinaba Mukherjee

Kalyani Government Engineering College

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sourav Sikdar

Kalyani Government Engineering College

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Avijit Paul

Kalyani Government Engineering College

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Naoual Boujedaini

Kalyani Government Engineering College

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Debrup Chakraborty

Kalyani Government Engineering College

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jesmin Mondal

Kalyani Government Engineering College

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Raktim Biswas

Kalyani Government Engineering College

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge