| Literature DB >> 29358310 |
Huan-Huan Sha1, Zhen Wang2, Shu-Chen Dong1, Tian-Mu Hu3, Si-Wen Liu4, Jun-Ying Zhang4, Yang Wu4, Rong Ma4, Jian-Zhong Wu4, Dan Chen4, Ji-Feng Feng5.
Abstract
The 7-nitro-2,1,3-nitrobenzoxadiazole (NBD) derivatives are a series of compounds containing the NBD scaffold that are not glutathione (GSH) peptidomimetics, and result in a strong inhibition of glutathione S-transferases (GSTs). Growing evidences highlight their pivotal roles and outstanding anticancer activity in different tumor models. In particular, 6-(7-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazol-4-ylthio) hexanol (NBDHEX) is extensively studied, which is a very efficient inhibitor of GSTP1-1. It triggers apoptosis in several tumor cell lines and this cytotoxic activity is observed at micro and submicromolar concentrations. Importantly, studies have shown that NBDHEX acts as an anticancer drug by inhibiting GSTs catalytic activity, avoiding inconvenience of the inhibitor extrusion from the cell by specific pumps and disrupting the interaction between the GSTP1-1 and key signaling effectors. Additionally, some researchers also have discovered that NBDHEX can act as late-phase autophagy inhibitor, which opens new opportunities to fully exploit its therapeutic potential. In this review, we summarize the advantages, anticancer mechanisms, and analogs of this compound, which will establish the basis on the usage of NBDHEX in clinical applications in future.Entities:
Keywords: GSTP1-1 (Glutathione S-transferase Pi); JNK (c-Jun N-Terminal Kinase); NBDHEX (6- (7-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazol-4-ylthio) hexanol); anticancer
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29358310 PMCID: PMC5809612 DOI: 10.1042/BSR20171440
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosci Rep ISSN: 0144-8463 Impact factor: 3.840
Figure 1Structures of NBDHEX and its analogs
The involvement of NBDHEX in biology process in different cancers
| Cancer type | References | Effect | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acute T-lymphoblastoid leukemia | [ | Apoptosis | |
| Chronic myeloid leukemia | [ | Apoptosis | |
| Acute myeloid leukemia | [ | Apoptosis and necrosis | |
| SCLC | [ | Apoptosis and necrosis | |
| Hepatic carcinoma | [ | Apoptosis | |
| Osteosarcoma | [ | Apoptosis | |
| [ | Proliferation blockage | ||
| Against metastatization | |||
| [ | Apoptosis and cell cycle arrest | ||
| [ | Autophagy inhibition | ||
| Ewing’s sarcoma | [ | Cell cycle retardation | |
| Cytostatic effects | |||
| [ | Antiproliferation | ||
| Tumor growth inhibition | |||
| Rhabdomyosarcoma | [ | Proliferation blockage | |
| Melanoma | [ | Apoptosis and cell cycle arrest | |
| Apoptosis and antiproliferation | |||
| [ | Apoptosis | ||
| Tumor growth inhibition | |||
| [ | Apoptosis and antiproliferation | ||
| Mesothelioma | [ | Apoptosis |
Effects of the in vitro administration of NBDHEX and conventional anticancer drugs in different cell lines
| Cancer type | Reference | Drug | Treatment schedule | Drug–drug interactions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Osteosarcoma | [ | CDDP | NBDHEX + CDDP | Mostly add |
| NBDHEX → CDDP | Add and syn | |||
| CDDP → NBDHEX | Add | |||
| [ | DX | NBDHEX + DX | Mostly syn | |
| NBDHEX → DX | Mostly syn | |||
| DX→ NBDHEX | Mostly syn | |||
| MTX | NBDHEX + MTX | Ant | ||
| NBDHEX → MTX | Ant and syn | |||
| MTX→ NBDHEX | Mostly ant | |||
| Ewing’s sarcoma | [ | DX | NBDHEX + DX | Ant |
| NBDHEX → DX | Mostly syn | |||
| DX→ NBDHEX | Syn | |||
| VCR | NBDHEX + DX | Add, syn, and ant | ||
| NBDHEX → DX | Mostly syn | |||
| DX→ NBDHEX | Syn | |||
| [ | ETO | NBDHEX + ETO | Syn | |
| Rhabdomyosarcoma | [ | DX | NBDHEX + DX | Add |
| VCR | NBDHEX + DX | Syn | ||
| Melanoma | [ | TMZ | NBDHEX + TMZ | Syn |
| Mesothelioma | [ | CDDP | NBDHEX + CDDP | Syn |
| NBDHEX → CDDP | Add and syn |
Abbreviations: Add, additive (0.90 ≤ combination index ≤ 1.10); ant, antagonistic (combination index > 1.10); CDDP, cisplatin; DX, doxorubicin; ETO, etoposide; MTX, methotrexate; Syn, synergistic (combination index < 0.90); TMZ, temozolomide; VCR, vincristine.
Figure 2Proposed action mechanism of NBDHEX
NBDHEX causes the dissociation of both the GSTP1-1–TRAF2 and the GSTP1-1–JNK complexes and triggers the activation of the MAPK signaling pathway. It induces apoptosis and cell cycle arrest via the phospho-activation of JNK and p38 and their downstream targets including c-Jun, ATF2, and p53. Besides, JNK can participate in impairing autophagy. In addition, the possibility that NBDHEX directly activates p38 through the imbalance of the intracellular redox state cannot be excluded, in which case, cells died by necrosis.