| Literature DB >> 30423952 |
Anna Lichota1, Krzysztof Gwozdzinski2.
Abstract
This paper describes the substances of plant and marine origin that have anticancer properties. The chemical structure of the molecules of these substances, their properties, mechanisms of action, their structure⁻activity relationships, along with their anticancer properties and their potential as chemotherapeutic drugs are discussed in this paper. This paper presents natural substances from plants, animals, and their aquatic environments. These substances include the vinca alkaloids, mistletoe plant extracts, podophyllotoxin derivatives, taxanes, camptothecin, combretastatin, and others including geniposide, colchicine, artesunate, homoharringtonine, salvicine, ellipticine, roscovitine, maytanasin, tapsigargin, and bruceantin. Compounds (psammaplin, didemnin, dolastin, ecteinascidin, and halichondrin) isolated from the marine plants and animals such as microalgae, cyanobacteria, heterotrophic bacteria, invertebrates (e.g., sponges, tunicates, and soft corals) as well as certain other substances that have been tested on cells and experimental animals and used in human chemotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: anticancer properties; natural compounds; substances from marin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30423952 PMCID: PMC6275022 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19113533
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Anticancer effects of natural compounds from plants in different experimental systems.
| Natural Compounds | Origin | Cell Line | Dose | Mechanisms of Action | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| acute lymphocytic leukaemia, | <1 μmol | inhibit the microtubule dynamics and stabilise them | [ | ||
| human colon cancer cells (Colo 320 HSR) | 10–100 ng/mL | activation of the intrinsic (activated Caspase–2 and 9) extrinsic (activated Caspase–2, 3 and 8) pathways of apoptosis | [ | ||
| Taxanes | PTX: | IC50 of PTX: | mitosis inhibitors | [ | |
| Camptothecin | human colon HCT116, breast cancer cells (MCF-7), prostate cancer (DU145), leukaemia (CEM) | IC50 of CPT: | binds to a complex consisting of DNA and topoisomerase I | [ | |
| Combretastatin | human thyroid papillary carcinoma cell (TPC1) | >5 µM | binds to β-tubulin at what is known as the colchicine site | [ | |
| Podophyllotoxins |
| small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) | >1 µg/mL | disrupt the organisation of the karyokinetic spindle | [ |
| Geniposide and its derivatives | human non–small-cell lung cancer H1299 cell | IC50 | activation of the mitochondrial execution pathway by Caspase-9 and -3 | [ | |
| Colchicine | hepatocellular carcinoma HepG2 | 10 μM | depolymerises the microtubules at high concentrations | [ | |
| Artesunate | chronic myeloid leukaemia K562 cells | 2 μM | antiangiogenic effect | [ | |
| Homoharrigtonine | gallbladder adenocarcinoma cell line (Mz-ChA-1), | Mz-ChA-1 | blocks synthesis in the peptidyl transferase centre | [ | |
| Salvicine | leukaemia cell (P388, HL-60), stomach cancer cell (SGC-7901) | IC50: | breaks two strands of DNA by facilitating TOP2 activity | [ | |
| Elipticine | leukaemia (HL-60, CCRF-CEM) cells | IC50: | disrupts the cell-cycle by regulating the expression of some kinases (cyclin B1 and Cdc2) | [ | |
| Roscovitine | highly metastatic and invasive breast cancer cells MDA-MB231 | 10 μg/mL | inhibits cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) activity, which preferentially inhibits numerous target enzymes such as CDK1, CDK2 and CDK5 leading to cell-cycle arrest in the G1 and G2 phases | [ | |
| Maytansin | COLO 205 cells | IC50: | inhibits microtubule assembly by binding to tubulin | [ | |
| Tapsigargin | mouse embryonic fibroblast (MEF) cells | 3 μM | inhibits sarcoplasmic/endoplasmic reticulum calcium adenosine triphosphatase (SERCA) in the sarco/endoplasmic reticulum, raises the intracellular calcium concentration, | [ | |
| Bruceantin | human pancreatic cancer cells (PANC-1, SW1990) | IC50 of Bruceantinoside A: | inhibits protein synthesis through interaction with peptidyltransferase, which blocks the formation of peptide binding | [ |
IC50—The concentration corresponding to a survival rate of 50% is defined as the IC50.
Anticancer effects of marine natural compounds in different experimental systems.
| Natural Compounds | Origin | Target Cells | Dose | Mechanisms of Action | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Psammaplin | human endometrial Ishikawa cancer cells | 5 μg/mL | antiproliferative effects, | [ | |
| Didemnin |
| MOLT-4 cells (human T lymphoblast; acute lymphoblastic leukaemia) | 5–30 nM | cell-cycle phase perturbations, | [ |
| Dolastatine |
| human breast cancer cells (MCF-7, R-27) | 20 ng/mL | disrupts mitotic cell division | [ |
| Ecteinascidin |
| L1210 leukaemia cells | IC50 | binds in the minor groove of DNA to induce an unprecedented bend in the DNA helix towards the major groove | [ |
| Halichondrin B |
| L1210 murine leukaemia cells | IC50 | tubulin inhibitor | [ |
IC50—The concentration corresponding to a survival rate of 50% is defined as the IC50.
Figure 1Catharanthus alkaloids: (1) vincristine, (2) vinblastine, (3) vindesine, (4) vinorelbine, and (5) vinflunine.
Figure 2Taxanes: (6) paclitaxel, (7) docetaxel, (8) cabazitaxel.
Figure 3Camptothecin and its derivatives: (9) camptothecin, (10) irinotecan, (11) topotecan.
Figure 4(12) Hydrolysis of the lactone ring in camptothecin.
Figure 5Stabilizing of the E ring by addition of methylene group; (13) diflomotecan.
Figure 6Stabilizing of the E ring by withdrawing of the lactonic group; (14) derivative of campothecin with the methylenodioxy ring and the substituent cyclobutane at position 7.
Figure 7Camptothecin complex with topoisomerase I and DNA base [41].
Figure 8(15) Exatecan.
Figure 9(16) Combretastatin A-1.
Figure 10Pelatins: (17) α-peltatin, (18) β-peltatin.
Figure 11Podophyllotoxin derivatives: (19) podophyllotoxin, (20) etoposide, (21) teniposide.
Figure 12Genipin derivatives: (22) genipin, (23) geniposide, (24) geniposidic acid.
Figure 13(25) Colchicine.
Figure 14(26) Artesunate.
Figure 15(27) Homoharrigtonine.
Figure 16(28) Salvicine.
Figure 17(29) Ellipticine.
Figure 18(30) Roscovitine.
Figure 19(31) Maytansin.
Figure 20(32) Thapsigargin.
Figure 21(33) Bruceantin.
Figure 22Psammaplin derivatives: (34) psammaplin A, (35) psammaplin F, (36) psammaplin G, (37) biprasin.
Figure 23(38) NVP-LAQ824.
Figure 24(39) Didemnin B, (40) plitidepsin.
Figure 25Dolastin 10 and dolastin 15 derivatives: (41) dolastatin 10, (42) auristatin PE, (43) cematodin, (44) synthadotin, (45) dolastatin 15.
Figure 26(46) Ecteinascidin, (47) cyanosafracin B.
Figure 27(48) Halichondrin B, (49) halichondrin analog E7389.