| Literature DB >> 30301146 |
Myriam Mérarchi1,2, Gautam Sethi3, Lu Fan4, Srishti Mishra5, Frank Arfuso6, Kwang Seok Ahn7.
Abstract
Despite tremendous progress made during the last few decades in the treatment options for cancer, compounds isolated from Mother Nature remain the mainstay for therapy of various malignancies. Fangchinoline, initially isolated from the dried root of Stephaniae tetrandrine, has been found to exhibit diverse pharmacological effects including significant anticancer activities both in tumor cell lines and selected preclinical models. This alkaloid appears to act by modulating the activation of various important oncogenic molecules involved in tumorigenesis leading to a significant decrease in aberrant proliferation, survival and metastasis of tumor cells. This mini-review briefly describes the potential effects of fangchinoline on important hallmarks of cancer and highlights the molecular targets modulated by this alkaloid in various tumor cell lines and preclinical models.Entities:
Keywords: apoptosis; cancer; fangchinoline; molecular targets; proliferation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30301146 PMCID: PMC6222742 DOI: 10.3390/molecules23102538
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1The chemical structure of fangchinoline.
Molecular targets modulated by fangchinoline in in vitro and in vivo models of cancer.
| Cancer Types | Concentration Range Tested | Pathways/Molecules Altered | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| A549 lung adenocarcinoma | 10–40 µM | FAK ↓; | [ |
| MG63 and U20S bone cancer | 10–30 µM | PI3K ↓; | [ |
| MDA-MB-231 breast cancer | 6.25–100 µM | MMP-2&-9 ↓ | [ |
| SPC-A-1 lung adenocarcinoma | 2.5–10 µM | G0/G1 phase Arrest ↓ | [ |
| T24 and 5637 bladder cancer | 2.5–40 µM | Caspase-3 ↓ | [ |
| PC3 prostate cancer | 10–30 µM | G1/S phase ↓ | [ |
| U87MG and U118MG GBM | 10–30 µM | Akt/p21 ↓ | [ |
| HepG2 and PLC/PRF/5 hepatocellular carcinoma | 2–10 μM | p53 ↑ | [ |
| AGS gastric | 0–60 μM | Akt↓ | [ |
| A375 and A875 melanoma | 10–20 μM | FAK ↓ | [ |
| MiaPaCa-2 and Panc-1 pancreatic cancer | 0–15 μM | NR4A1 ↓ | [ |
FAK: Focal adhesion kinase. MMP2&9: Matrix metalloproteinases. Akt: Protein kinase B. MEK: Mitogen-activated protein kinases. ERK: Extracellular signal-regulated kinases. PI3K: Phosphoinositide 3-kinase. NF-κB: Nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells. IκB protein: NF-κB transcription factor inhibitor. LC3: Microtubule-associated protein 1A/1B-light chain 3. p62: Nucleoporin p62. mTOR: Mechanistic target of rapamycin. ATP: Adenosine triphosphate. PCNA: Proliferating cell nuclear antigen. p27: Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1B. BAD: Bcl-2-associated death promoter. NR4A1: Nuclear receptor subfamily 4 group A member 1 of the nerve growth factor IB. Sp-1: Specificity protein 1, p53: Phosphoprotein, cellular tumor antigen. AMP: Adenosine monophosphate. TIMP: Metallopeptidase inhibitor 1. ↑: Upregulation. ↓: Downregulation.
Figure 2Molecular targets modulated by fangchinoline in tumor cells. FAK: Focal adhesion kinase; MMP2/MMP9: Matrix metalloproteinase; Akt: Protein kinase B; MEK: Mitogen-activated protein kinases; ERK: Extracellular signal-regulated kinases; PI3K: Phosphoinositide 3-kinase; NF-κB: nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells; Iκβ protein: NF-κB transcription factor inhibitor; LC3: Microtubule-associated protein 1A/1B-light chain 3; p62: Nucleoporin p62; mTOR: Mechanistic target of rapamycin; p27: Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor; BAD: Bcl-2-associated death promoter; NR4A1: Nuclear receptor subfamily 4 group A member 1 of the nerve growth factor IB; Sp1: Specificity protein 1; AMP: Adenosine monophosphate; TIMP: Metallopeptidase inhibitor 1. ↑: Upregulation. ↓: Downregulation.