| Literature DB >> 30540125 |
Carlos Roberto Koscky Paier1, Sarah Sant'Anna Maranhão1,2, Teiliane Rodrigues Carneiro1,3,4, Lídia Moreira Lima4, Danilo Damasceno Rocha1, Renan da Silva Santos1,2, Kaio Moraes de Farias1,3, Manoel Odorico de Moraes-Filho1,2,3, Claudia Pessoa1,2,3.
Abstract
Cell cycle control genes are frequently mutated in cancer cells, which usually display higher rates of proliferation than normal cells. Dysregulated mitosis leads to genomic instability, which contributes to tumor progression and aggressiveness. Many drugs that disrupt mitosis have been studied because they induce cell cycle arrest and tumor cell death. These antitumor compounds are referred to as antimitotics. Vinca alkaloids and taxanes are natural products that target microtubules and inhibit mitosis, and their derivatives are among the most commonly used drugs in cancer therapy worldwide. However, severe adverse effects such as neuropathies are frequently observed during treatment with microtubule-targeting agents. Many efforts have been directed at developing improved antimitotics with increased specificity and decreased likelihood of inducing side effects. These new drugs generally target specific components of mitotic regulation that are mainly or exclusively expressed during cell division, such as kinases, motor proteins and multiprotein complexes. Such small molecules are now in preclinical studies and clinical trials, and many are products or derivatives from natural sources. In this review, we focused on the most promising targets for the development of antimitotics and discussed the advantages and disadvantages of these targets. We also highlighted the novel natural antimitotic agents under investigation by our research group, including combretastatins, withanolides and pterocarpans, which show the potential to circumvent the main issues in antimitotic therapy.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30540125 PMCID: PMC6256996 DOI: 10.6061/clinics/2018/e813s
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clinics (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1807-5932 Impact factor: 2.365
Figure 1Antimitotic targets and their respective inhibitors as cited in the text. The targets are placed in the illustration according to the cell cycle phase in which they perform their main functions. The corresponding inhibitors are listed in the legend. The phases of mitosis are depicted in blue, the phases of interphase are in green, and cell cycle checkpoints are in red. The compounds (+)2,3,9-trimethoxypterocarpan and withaphysalin F are not included, because their targets are unknown.
Cytotoxic activity (mean IC50±SEM) of LASSBio-1586 analogs and the CA-4 and LASSBio-1586 standards in tumor cell lines and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) after 72h of treatment (IC50 values are in µmol.L-1). SEM, standard error of the mean; IC50, the concentration of a compound needed to reduce cell growth by 50% in vitro.
| Compound | HL60 (mean IC50±SEM) | OVCAR-8 (mean IC50±SEM) | HCT-8 (mean IC50±SEM) | PBMCs (mean IC50±SEM) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LASSBio-1837 | 0.047±1.0×10-3 | 0.099±0.010 | 0.27±0.020 | 0.24±0.045 |
| LASSBio-1839 | 0.34±0.028 | 1.26±0.24 | 1.08±0.25 | 0.51±0.020 |
| LASSBio-1840 | 0.10±0.031 | 0.39±0.031 | 0.34±0.068 | 0.43±8.1×10-4 |
| LASSBio-1917 | 0.074±0.018 | 0.55±0.37 | 0.48±0.032 | 0.71±4.0×10-3 |
| LASSBio-1918 | 0.75±0.085 | 4.26±0.20 | 4.18±0.17 | 2.14±0.61 |
| LASSBio-1919 | 0.081±0.029 | 0.31±0.19 | 0.33±0.019 | 0.33±0.086 |
| LASSBio-1920 | 3.0×10-4±4.0×10-5 | 9.0×10-3±6.0×10-3 | 5.0×10-3±3.0×10-3 | 0.10±0.011 |
| CA-4 | 2.2×10-3±3.0×10-4 | 5.0×10-4±1.0×10-4 | 5.0×10-3±1.0×10-3 | 3.2×10-3 |
| LASSBio-1586 | 0.29±1.2×10-3 | 0.29±0.040 | 0.45±0.081 | 1.34±0.065 |
Cytotoxic selectivity index (SI), which represents the IC50 for PBMCs/cancer cell lines after 72h of treatment. PBMCs, peripheral blood mononuclear cells; SEM, standard error of the mean; IC50, the concentration of a compound needed to reduce cell growth by 50% in vitro.
| Compound | SI PBMC/HL-60 | SI PBMC/OVCAR-8 | SI PBMC/HCT-8 |
|---|---|---|---|
| LASSBio-1920 | 333.30 | 11.11 | 20.0 |
| LASSBio-1586 | 4.60 | 4.60 | 3.0 |
| CA-4 | 1.45 | 6.40 | 0.60 |
Figure 2Combretastatin A-4 analogs. (A) LASSBio-1586. (B) LASSBio-1920.
Figure 3Structure of pterocarpans isolated from Platymiscium floribundum by Falcão et al. 95.
Figure 4Formation of atypical mitotic spindles in 2,3,9-trimethoxypterocarpan-treated cells. Actin (green), tubulin (blue) and nuclei (red) are labeled in breast carcinoma and nontumor (BRL3A) cells treated or not treated with the compound. Note the normal arrangement of tubulin and actin fibers in the control cells; the formation of monopolar spindles in MCF-7, HS58T and BRL3A cells; and the formation of tripolar spindles in T47D cells. Figure from Militão et al. 97.