| Literature DB >> 28608578 |
Fabio Polticelli1,2, Loris Leboffe1, Valentina Tortosa1, Viviana Trezza1, Gabriella Fanali3, Mauro Fasano4,5, Paolo Ascenzi6.
Abstract
Cantharidin, a monoterpene isolated from the insect blister beetle, has long been used as a medicinal agent in the traditional Chinese medicine. Cantharidin inhibits a subgroup of serine/threonine phosphatases, thus inducing cell growth inhibition and cytotoxicity. Cantharidin has anticancer activity in vitro, since it is able of inducing p53-dependent apoptosis and double-strand breakage of DNA in cancer cells. Although the toxicity of cantharidin to the gastrointestinal and urinary tracts prevents its medical use, it is a promising lead compound for chemical modification to develop new anticancer therapeutics. In fact, cantharidin does not cause myelosuppression and displays anticancer activity against cells with a multidrug resistance phenotype. Here, the competitive inhibitory effect of cantharidin on heme-Fe(III) binding to the fatty acid site 1 (FA1) of human serum albumin (HSA) is reported. Docking and molecular dynamics simulations support functional data indicating the preferential binding of cantharidin to the FA1 site of HSA. Present results may be relevant in vivo as HSA could transport cantharidin, which in turn could affect heme-Fe(III) scavenging by HSA.Entities:
Keywords: cantharidin binding; competitive inhibition; heme-Fe(III) binding; human serum albumin; molecular docking; molecular dynamics simulations
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28608578 DOI: 10.1002/jmr.2641
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Recognit ISSN: 0952-3499 Impact factor: 2.137