| Literature DB >> 25815333 |
Jaquelina Julia Guzmán-Rodríguez1, Alejandra Ochoa-Zarzosa1, Rodolfo López-Gómez2, Joel E López-Meza1.
Abstract
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are part of the innate immune defense mechanism of many organisms and are promising candidates to treat infections caused by pathogenic bacteria to animals and humans. AMPs also display anticancer activities because of their ability to inactivate a wide range of cancer cells. Cancer remains a cause of high morbidity and mortality worldwide. Therefore, the development of methods for its control is desirable. Attractive alternatives include plant AMP thionins, defensins, and cyclotides, which have anticancer activities. Here, we provide an overview of plant AMPs anticancer activities, with an emphasis on their mode of action, their selectivity, and their efficacy.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25815333 PMCID: PMC4359852 DOI: 10.1155/2015/735087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Classification of plant AMPs1.
| Family | Disulfide bonds | Activity |
|---|---|---|
| Thionins | 3-4 | Bacteria, fungi, and cytotoxic |
| Defensins | 3-4 | Bacteria, fungi, and cytotoxic |
| Cyclotides | 3 | Bacteria, virus, insects, and cytotoxic |
| Knottin-like | 3 | Gram (+) bacteria and fungi |
| Shepherdins | 0 (linear) | Bacteria and fungi |
| MBP-1 | 2 | Bacteria and fungi |
| Ib-AMPs | 2 | Gram (+) bacteria and fungi |
| LTP | 3-4 | Bacteria and fungi |
| Snakins | 6 | Bacteria and fungi |
| Hevein-like | 4 | Gram (+) bacteria and fungi |
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| 6 | Fungi |
| 2S albumins | 2 | Bacteria and fungi |
1Modified from [21–23].
Thionins with anticancer and cytotoxic activity.
| Name | Species | Activity against | Cytotoxic activity | Anticancer activity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pyrularia |
| B16, HeLa, rat hepatocytes, and lymphocytes | Yes | Yes | [ |
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| Viscotoxin B2 |
| Rat sarcoma cells | Not tested | Yes | [ |
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| Viscotoxins 1-PS, A1, A2, A3, and B |
| Human lymphocytes | Yes | Not tested | [ |
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| Viscotoxin C1 |
| Rat sarcoma cells | Not tested | Yes | [ |
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| Ligatoxin B |
| U-937-GTB ACHN | Not tested | Yes | [ |
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| Ligatoxin A |
| Animal cells | Yes | Not tested | [ |
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| Phoratoxins A and B |
| Mice | Yes | Not tested | [ |
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| Phoratoxins C, D, E, and F |
| 10 cancer cell lines | Not tested | Yes | [ |
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| Thi2.1 |
| HeLa, A549, MCF-7, and bovine mammary epithelial cells | Yes | Yes | [ |
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| p388 | Not tested | Yes | [ |
Figure 1Alignment of amino acid sequences from thionins. The asterisk indicates amino acids conserved in all family members. The cysteine residues present in all sequences and relevant to the classification are indicated in red letters. The red arrows indicate the three residues that are essential for binding to the head regions of the membrane lipids. The hydrophobic residues are shaded in yellow. The thionin sequences included in the alignment were pyrularia (GenBank accession P07504) from Pyrularia pubera, viscotoxins 1-PS (GenBank accession P01537), A1 (GenBank accession 3C8P_A), A2 (GenBank accession P32880), A3 (GenBank accession VTVAA3), B (GenBank accession 1JMP_A), B2 (GenBank accession 2V9B_B), and C1 (GenBank accession P83554) from Viscum album, phoratoxins A (GenBank accession P01539), B, C, D, E, and F [24] from Phoradendron tomentosum, and crambin (GenBank accession P01542) from Crambe hispanica.
Plant defensins with anticancer and cytotoxic activity.
| Name | Species | Activity against | Cytotoxic activity | Anticancer activity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sesquin |
| MCF-7 and M1 | Not tested | Yes | [ |
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| Limenin |
| L1210 and M1 | Not tested | Yes | [ |
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| Lunatusin |
| MCF-7 | Yes | Yes | [ |
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| Purple pole defensin |
| HepG2, MCF7, HT-29, and SiHa | No | Yes | [ |
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| Coccinin |
| HL60 and L1210 | No | Yes | [ |
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| Phaseococcin |
| L1210 and HL60 | No | Yes | [ |
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| HeLa | No | Yes | [ |
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| NaD1 |
| U937 | Not tested | Yes | [ |
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| Mitogenic defensin |
| MCF-7, murine splenocytes | Yes | Yes | [ |
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| Vulgarinin |
| MCF-7, L1210, and M1 | Not tested | Yes | [ |
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| Cloud bean defensin |
| L1210 and MBL2 | Not tested | Yes | [ |
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| Nepalese |
| L1210, MBL2 | Not tested | Yes | [ |
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| Gymnin |
| M1, HepG2, and L1210 | Not tested | Yes | [ |
Figure 2Alignment of amino acid sequences from cytotoxic cyclotides. (a) The cysteine residues present in all sequences and relevant to the classification are indicated in red letters. The asparagine residues present in all sequences and relevant to the cyclization process are indicated in blue letters. (b) Amino acid sequence alignment of cycloviolacins O2 and 13. The replacement of serine by alanine (shaded in green) increases the hemolytic effect by more than 3-fold. (c) Amino acid sequence alignment of Viphi G, Viphi E, Viphi F, Viphi A, and Viphi D cyclotides. Shaded in yellow are the sequences with no-toxic effects; the red arrows indicate the residues with specific variations. The sequences included in the alignment were cliotides T1 (GenBank accession AEK26402), T2 (GenBank accession AEK26403), T3 (GenBank accession AEK26404), and T4 (GenBank accession AEK26405) from Clitoria ternatea, cycloviolacins O2 (GenBank accession P58434) and O13 (GenBank accession Q5USNB) from Viola odorata, Vibi D (GenBank accession P85242), Vibi G (GenBank accession P85245), and Vibi H (GenBank accession P85246) from Viola biflora, Varv A (GenBank accession Q5USN7) and Varv F (GenBank accession 3E4H_A) from Viola odorata, Mram 8, Viphi A, Viphi D, Viphi E, Viphi F, and Viphi G [73] from Viola philippica, and Vaby D [55] from Viola abyssinica.
Cyclotides with anticancer and cytotoxic activity.
| Name | Species | Activity against | Cytotoxic activity | Anticancer activity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cycloviolacin O2 |
| U-937, HeLa | Yes | Yes | [ |
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| Viphi A, Viphi F, and Viphi G |
| MM96L, HeLa, BGC-823, and HFF-1 | Yes | Yes | [ |
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| MCoTI-I |
| LNCaP and HCT116 | Not tested | Yes | [ |
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| HB7 |
| Capan2 and PANC1 | Not tested | Yes | [ |
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| Vaby A and Vaby D |
| U-937 | Not tested | Yes | [ |
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| Cliotides T1–T4 |
| HeLa and human erythrocytes | Yes | Yes | [ |
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| Psyle A, Psyle C, and Psyle E |
| U-937 | Not tested | Yes | [ |
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| Vibi G and Vibi H |
| U-937 | Not tested | Yes | [ |
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| Varv A and Varv F |
| 10 cancer cell lines | Not tested | Yes | [ |
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| Viba 15, Viba 17, and Mram 8 |
| HFF1, MM96L, HeLa, BGC-823, and HFF-1 | Yes | Yes | [ |
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| CT-2, CT-4, CT-7, CT-10, CT-12, and CT-19 |
| A549 | Not tested | Yes | [ |
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| Kalata B1 and kalata B2 |
| U-937 GTB | Yes | Yes | [ |