%0 Journal Article %T Cirsilineol inhibits proliferation of lung squamous cell carcinoma by inducing ROS mediated apoptosis. %A Pathak G %A Singh S %A Kumari P %A Hussain Y %A Raza W %A Luqman S %A Meena A %J Food Chem Toxicol %V 143 %N 0 %D Sep 2020 %M 32640357 %F 5.572 %R 10.1016/j.fct.2020.111550 %X Cirsilineol belonging to the flavones category have not been explored in detail for anti-proliferative potential, therefore selected for the investigation. Hence, the antiproliferative potential of cirsilineol has been established in NCIH-520 cells. Cirsilineol exhibited good binding-energy and inhibited the activity of ODC, CATD, DHFR, HYAL, LOX-5, and COX-2 up to 45.14% at 100 μM. It significantly inhibited the proliferation of NCIH-520 cells (81.96%) and likewise, the proliferation of other cell lines up to 48.50%. It also induced an increase in the sub-diploid cell population, which then leads to an increase in apoptosis by 2.64 and 5.12 fold at 10 μM and 100 μM respectively. Further, the Annexin-V-FITC assay confirmed the late apoptosis and necrosis in the NCIH-520 cell line induced by cirsilineol. The ROS production was enhanced by 1.16 and 2.22 folds at 10 μM and 100 μM respectively. Besides, cirsilineol revealed acceptable ADME properties, non-toxic and non-mutagenic compound. Altogether, these findings provide evidence that cirsilineol inhibited the proliferation of NCIH-520 cells by inducing ROS-mediated apoptosis and offer new insight into the anti-proliferative potential of cirsilineol, which can further be exploited to either synthesise new derivatives or its candid usage as a herbal lead for cancer treatment.