| Literature DB >> 27445824 |
Hui-Li Tan1, Kok-Gan Chan2, Priyia Pusparajah3, Surasak Saokaew4, Acharaporn Duangjai5, Learn-Han Lee6, Bey-Hing Goh6.
Abstract
Epimedium (family Berberidaceae), commonly known as Horny Goat Weed or Yin Yang Huo, is commonly used as a tonic, aphrodisiac, anti-rheumatic and anti-cancer agent in traditional herbal formulations in Asian countries such as China, Japan, and Korea. The major bioactive compounds present within this plant include icariin, icaritin and icariside II. Although it is best known for its aphrodisiac properties, scientific and pharmacological studies suggest it possesses broad therapeutic capabilities, especially for enhancing reproductive function and osteoprotective, neuroprotective, cardioprotective, anti-inflammatory and immunoprotective effects. In recent years, there has been great interest in scientific investigation of the purported anti-cancer properties of icariin and its derivatives. Data from in vitro and in vivo studies suggests these compounds demonstrate anti-cancer activity against a wide range of cancer cells which occurs through various mechanisms such as apoptosis, cell cycle modulation, anti-angiogenesis, anti-metastasis and immunomodulation. Of note, they are efficient at targeting cancer stem cells and drug-resistant cancer cells. These are highly desirable properties to be emulated in the development of novel anti-cancer drugs in combatting the emergence of drug resistance and overcoming the limited efficacy of current standard treatment. This review aims to summarize the anti-cancer mechanisms of icariin and its derivatives with reference to the published literature. The currently utilized applications of icariin and its derivatives in cancer treatment are explored with reference to existing patents. Based on the data compiled, icariin and its derivatives are shown to be compounds with tremendous potential for the development of new anti-cancer drugs.Entities:
Keywords: Yin Yang Huo; anti-cancer; ethnopharmacology; icariin; icariside II; icaritin
Year: 2016 PMID: 27445824 PMCID: PMC4925704 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2016.00191
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 1Chemical structures of icariin and its derivatives isolated from . Icariin (1), icaritin (2), and icariside II (3).
Apoptotic activity of icariin and its derivatives.
| Icariin | Human lung adenocarcinoma cells (A459) | Activation of ERS signaling, increased expression of ERS-related molecules (p-ERK, ATF6, GRP78, p-eIF2α, and CHOP, downregulation of Bcl2 expression and upregulation of PUMA | Di et al., | |
| Human esophageal cancer cells (EC109 and TE1) | Activation of ERS signaling, increased expression of ERS-related molecules (p-ERK, ATF4, GRP78, p-eIF2α, and CHOP, downregulation of Bcl2 expression and upregulation of PUMA | Fan et al., | ||
| Human hepatoma cells (SMMC-7721, Bel-7402, and HepG2) | Activation of ROS/JNK-dependent mitochondrial pathway that involved the generation of ROS and JNK activation, resulted in enhanced Bax-to-Bcl-2 ratio, loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, cytochrome c release, and caspase cascade | Li et al., | ||
| Mouse tumor Leydig cells (MLTC-1) | Activation of caspase-9, -3, enhanced Bax/Bcl-2 ratio, and release of cytochrome c, as well as down-regulation of the expression of piwil4 | Wang et al., | ||
| Icaritin | Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HepG2) | Enhanced Bax/Bcl-2 ratio, activation of caspase-3, activation of JNK1 signaling | He et al., | |
| Leukemia cells (Primary acute myeloid leukemia cells, NB4, HL60, and U937) | Activation of caspase-9, -3, -7, cleavage of PARP, downregulation of c-myc, inhibition of MAPK/ERK, and PI3K/AKT signals. | Li et al., | ||
| Human Burkitt lymphoma cells (Raji and P3HR-1) | Activation of caspase-8, -9, cleavage of PARP, downregulation of c-myc and enhanced Bax/Bcl-2 ratio | Li et al., | ||
| Human liver cells (L02) and Human hepatocarcinoma cells (SMMC-7721) | Activation of caspase-3, -8, enhanced Bax/Bcl-2 ratio, increased expression levels of Fas | Sun et al., | ||
| Human endometrial cancer cells (Hec1A) | Activation of caspase-3 and caspase-9, cleavage of PARP, release of cytochrome c, enhanced Bax/Bcl-2 ratio, and sustained activation ERK1/2 signaling | Tong et al., | ||
| Extranodal NK/T-cell lymphoma cells (SNK-10 and SNT-8) | Activation of caspase-3 and caspase-9, enhanced Bax/Bcl-2 ratio, downregulation of p-Bad, inhibition of Jak/Stat3, and PI3K/Akt signaling pathway mediated by reduced expression of LMP1 | Wu et al., | ||
| Leukemia cells (Primary chronic myeloid leukemia cells and K562) | Activation of caspase-3, -9, release of cytochrome c, enhanced Bax/Bcl-2 ratio, downregulated expression of Apaf-1, inhibition of MAPK/ERK/JNK signals and down-regulated kinase activity of Jak-2/STAT3/Akt signal network | Zhu et al., | ||
| Icariside II | Human hepatoblastoma cells (HepG2), Mouse liver carcinoma cells (H22) | Mitochondrion membrane and lysomal membrane permeabilization, activation of caspase-3, -7, -8, -9, cleavage of PARP, enhanced Bax/Bcl-2 ratio. | Geng et al., | |
| Human breast cancer cells (MCF-7) | Activation of caspase-8, -9, decreased mitochondrial potential, release of cytochrome C and AIF, increased expression of Fas and FADD as well as increased expression of Bax and BimL | Huang et al., | ||
| Human acute myeloid leukemia cells (U937) | Activation of caspase-3, cleavage of PARP, and decreased bcl-xL and survivin, inactivation of STAT3-related signaling pathway. | Kang et al., | ||
| Multiple myeloma cells (U266) | Down-regulation of expression of Bcl-2, Bcl-xL, survivin, Cyclin D1, COX-2, and VEGF, enhanced PARP cleavage and caspase-3 activation, inhibition of STAT3 activation and enhanced expression of SHP-1 and PTEN through inhibiting JAK2 and c-Src | Kim et al., | ||
| Human prostate cancer cells (PC-3) | Activation of caspase-8, -9, -3, cleavage of PARP, decreased mitochondrial potential, COX-2, iNOS, and VEGF expression, release of cytochrome C, inhibition of COX-2/PGE2 pathway | Lee et al., | ||
| Human non-small cell lung cancer cells (A549) | Activation of caspase-3, -9, cleavage of PARP, release of cytochrome c, enhanced Bax/Bcl-2 ratio, Activation of ROS/MAPK pathway that involved activation of ROS downstream effectors, JNK and p38MAPK | Song et al., | ||
| Human eosophageal squamous carcinoma (Eca109) | Downregulation of survivin and Cyclin D1, inhibition of β-catenin-dependent signaling. | Wang et al., | ||
| Human epidermoid carcinoma cells (A431) | Activation of caspase-9, cleavage of PARP, inhibition of JAK/STAT3 and MAPK-ERK pathways, activation of PI3K/AKT pathway, inhibition of EGF-induced activation of EGFR pathway. | Wu et al., | ||
| Human melanoma cells (A375 and SK-MEL-5) and Mouse melanoma cells (B16) | Activation of caspase-3, decreased expression of survivin, inhibition of JAK/STAT3 and MAPK pathways as well as activation of PI3K/AKT pathway | Wu et al., |
Figure 2Icariin, icaritin, and icariside II exert apoptotic effects through multiple mechanisms, which include the inhibition of β-catenin-dependent signaling, EGFR signaling, MAPK/ERK signaling, PI3K/Akt signaling, JAK/STAT3 signaling, and COX-2/PGE. The activated pathways are such as ROS/JNK dependent mitochondria pathway, FAS-dependent apoptosis, JNK1 signaling, ERS signaling and ERK1/2 signaling. PI3K/Akt signaling can also be activated to inactivate JAK/STAT pathway.
Figure 3Cell cycle modulation by icariin and its derivatives. Icariin, icaritin, and icariside II induce cell cycle arrest through modulation of expression of cell cycle regulatory proteins at different stages of cell cycle, resulted in inhibition of tumor growth.
Cell cycle modulation of icariin and its derivatives.
| Icariin | Human gallbladder carcinoma cells (GBC-SD and SGC-996) | G0/G1 phase cell cycle arrest due to inhibition of expression of survivin | Zhang et al., | |
| Colorectal Cancer Cells (HCT116 and HT29) | G2/M phase cell cycle arrest through suppression of NF-κB activation and downregulation of Cyclin D1 | Zhang et al., | ||
| Icaritin | Breast cancer cells (MDA-MB-453 and MCF7) | G2/M phase cell cycle arrest accompanied by downregulation of the expression levels of the G2/M regulatory proteins such as Cyclin B, cdc2 and cdc25C | Guo et al., | |
| Human prostate carcinoma cells (PC-3) | G1 cell cycle arrest through increased expression of pRb, p27Kip1, and p16Ink4a as well as decreased expression of phosphorylated pRb, Cyclin D1 and CDK4. | Huang et al., | ||
| Human endometrial cancer cells (Hec1A) | Reductions of cyclin D1 and cdk4 protein expression and inductions of p21 and p27 expression. | Tong et al., | ||
| Extranodal NK/T-cell lymphoma cells (SNK-10 and SNT-8) | G2/M phase cell cycle arrest through inhibition of Jak/Stat3 and PI3K/Akt signaling pathway mediated by reduced expression of LMP1. | Wu et al., | ||
| Human lung cancer cells (A549) | S phase cell cycle arrest through downregulation of expression levels of S regulatory proteins such as Cyclin A and CDK2 | Zheng et al., | ||
| Human multiple myeloma cells U266 (ATCC TIB-196) and Human primary multiple myeloma cells | S phase cell cycle arrest downregulation of expression levels of S regulatory proteins such as Cyclin A, Cyclin B and CDK2 and upregulated the expression of Cyclin E | Zhu et al., | ||
| Icariside II | Human osteosarcoma cells (MG-63 and Saos-2) | Inhibition of epidermal growth factor (EGF)-induced activation of EGFR/mTOR signaling pathway, including EGFR, PI3K/AKT/PRAS40, Raf/MEK/ERK as well as mTOR. | Geng et al., | |
| Human eosophageal squamous carcinoma (Eca109) | Downregulation of survivin and Cyclin D1, inhibition of β-catenin-dependent signaling. | Wang et al., | ||
| Human melanoma cells (A375) | G0/G1 and G2/M phases cell cycle arrest through generation of ROS and activation of p38 and p53, accompanied by Inhibited the expression of cell-cycle related proteins, including Cyclin E, CDK2, Cyclin B1, and P-CDK1 | Wu et al., |
Anti-angiogenic effect of icariin and its derivatives.
| HUVECS and Zebrafish embryos | Inhibition of HUVECs proliferation, migration, and VEGF-induced tube formation as well as significant inhibition of blood vessel formation in zebrafish embryos, due to inhibition of ERK signaling pathways | Yu et al., | ||
| Icariin | HepG2 tumor | Decrease in CD31+ vessels in tumor | Yang et al., | |
| HUVECS and CAM Assay | Inhibition of proliferation of HUVECs and inhibition of angiogenesis in CAM, reduced expression of VEGF | Ye et al., | ||
| Icaritin | CAM Assay | Inhibition of angiogenesis in CAM | Hong et al., | |
| Renca tumor | Decrease in the mean positive area of CD31 in immunohistochemical analyses of tumor, reduced expression of VEGF, due to inhibition of activity of STAT3 | Li et al., | ||
| HUVECS | Inhibition of HUVEC proliferation, migration and tube formation | Zhang, | ||
| Icariside II | HUVECS | Inhibition of angiogenic function with reduced widths and lengths of the endothelial network-like structures in HUVECS, reduced expression of VEGF in human osteosarcoma cells | Choi et al., |
Figure 4Anti-angiogenic effect of icariin and its derivatives. The treatment of icariin, icaritin, and icariside II have resulted in anti-angiogenic effect. This can be due to the reduction in expression of VEGF, a crucial growth factor that acts as the fundamental regulator of angiogenesis.
Anti-metastatic effect of icariin and its derivatives.
| Icariin | Human lung adenocarcinoma cells (A459) | Decreased migration and adhesion of cells | Di et al., | |
| Human lung cancer cells (PG) | Decreased cell adhesive ratio to laminin substrate and reduced cell ability of invasion or migration | Mao et al., | ||
| Gastric carcinoma cells (BGC-823) | Inhibition of cells migration through downregulation of cell motility-related genes Rac1 and VASP | Wang et al., | ||
| Icaritin | Human glioblastoma cells (U87MG) | Downregulation of EMMPRIN via the PTEN/Akt/HIF-1α signaling pathway | Xu et al., | |
| Human osteosarcoma cells (SaOS2) | Decreased cell motility, through downregulation of MMP-2 and MMP-9 expression | Wang and Wang, | ||
| Icariside II | Human osteosarcoma cells (HOS) | Inhibition of the transcription of hypoxia-inducible genes involved in invasion/migration, such as uPAR, ADM, and MMP2 | Choi et al., | |
| Human cervical cancer cells (HeLa) and Breast cancer cells (MDA-MB-231) | Downregulation of the expression of CXCR4, through suppression of NF-κB activation | Kim and Park, | ||
| Human non-small cell lung cancer cells (A549 and H1299) | Inhibit of TNF-α-induced migration and EMT of cancer cells | Song et al., |
Figure 5Anti-metastatic effect of icariin and its derivatives. Icariin, icaritin, and icariside II inhibit metastasis of tumor by inhibiting cell adhesion, migration, and invasion through multiple mechanisms that resulted in downregulation of VASP, CXCR4, uPAR, ADM, and matrix metalloproteinases.
Applications of icariin and its derivatives with current cancer therapy.
| Icariin | Human Hepatocellular Carcinoma (SMMC-7721 and HepG2) | Arsenic trioxide | Potentiates antitumor effect of arsenic trioxide through by generation of intracellular ROS and inhibition of NF-κB activity | Li et al., | |
| Human colorectal carcinoma cells (HT29 and HCT116) | 5-fluorouracil | Potentiates antitumor effect of 5-fluorouracil through inhibition of NF-κB activity | Shi et al., | ||
| Human myeloid leukemia cells (HL-60 and NB4) | Arsenic trioxide | Potentiates antitumor effect of arsenic trioxide through generation of intracellular ROS | Wang et al., | ||
| Human glioblastoma cells (U87MG) | Temolozomide | Potentiates antitumor effect of temolozomide through inhibition of NF-κB activity | Yang et al., | ||
| Human gallbladder carcinoma cells (GBC-SD and SGC-996) | Gemcitabine | Potentiates antitumor effect of gemcitabine through inhibition of NF-κB activity and downregulation of NF-κB -regulated gene products | Zhang et al., | ||
| Colorectal Cancer Cells (HCT116 and HT29) | X-ray irradiation | Potentiate radiation-induced apoptosis of cancer cells through suppression of radiation-induced NF-κB activation and downregulation of NF-κB -regulated gene products | Zhang et al., | ||
| Icaritin | Murine breast cancer cells (4T1) | Ionizing radiation | Potentiate radiation-induced apoptosis and inhibition of cell proliferation as well as suppression of IR-induced survival path, ERK1/2 and AKT | Hong et al., | |
| Bladder cancer cells (BT5637 and T24) | Epirubicin | Inhibition of epirubicin-induced autophagy and synergistic effect with epirubicin to suppress cancer cell proliferation | Pan et al., | ||
| Extranodal NK/T-cell lymphoma cells (SNK-10 and SNT-8) | Ganciclovir | Potentiates ganciclovir-induced apoptosis through induction of lytic EBV infection | Wu et al., | ||
| Icariside II | Multiple myeloma cells (U266) | Bortezomib and Thalidomide | Enhanced cytotoxicity of bortezomib and thalidomide through enhancement of apoptosis | Kim et al., | |
| Human melanoma cells (A375) | Paclitaxel | Potentiates paclitaxel-induced apoptosis through inhibition of paclitaxel activated TLR4–MyD88–ERK signaling | Wu et al., |
Figure 6Anti-cancer mechanisms of icariin and its derivatives. Icariin and its derivatives mainly inhibit the growth of tumor through induction of apoptosis by targeting multiple signaling pathways. Cell cycle arrests also occur through downregulation of the expression of cell cycle regulatory proteins. Besides, there are anti-angiogenesis, anti-metastasis and immunomodulation. The compounds are also effective in targeting hormone-dependent cancers, cancer stem cells, and drug-resistant cancer cells. There are synergistic effects when icariin and its derivatives are used together with standard cancer therapy such as chemotherapy or radiotherapy.