| Literature DB >> 31443597 |
Shaden A M Khalifa1,2, Nizar Elias3, Mohamed A Farag4,5, Lei Chen6, Aamer Saeed7, Mohamed-Elamir F Hegazy8,9, Moustafa S Moustafa10, Aida Abd El-Wahed10, Saleh M Al-Mousawi10, Syed G Musharraf11, Fang-Rong Chang12, Arihiro Iwasaki13, Kiyotake Suenaga13, Muaaz Alajlani14,15, Ulf Göransson15, Hesham R El-Seedi16,17,18,19.
Abstract
Cancer remains one of the most lethal diseases worldwide. There is an urgent need for new drugs with novel modes of action and thus considerable research has been conducted for new anticancer drugs from natural sources, especially plants, microbes and marine organisms. Marine populations represent reservoirs of novel bioactive metabolites with diverse groups of chemical structures. This review highlights the impact of marine organisms, with particular emphasis on marine plants, algae, bacteria, actinomycetes, fungi, sponges and soft corals. Anti-cancer effects of marine natural products in in vitro and in vivo studies were first introduced; their activity in the prevention of tumor formation and the related compound-induced apoptosis and cytotoxicities were tackled. The possible molecular mechanisms behind the biological effects are also presented. The review highlights the diversity of marine organisms, novel chemical structures, and chemical property space. Finally, therapeutic strategies and the present use of marine-derived components, its future direction and limitations are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: anticancer; antitumor; clinical trials; cytotoxic; drugs; marine; microorganism; plants
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31443597 PMCID: PMC6780632 DOI: 10.3390/md17090491
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 5.118
Figure 1(A) Estimated new cancer cases in the worldwide based on Global Cancer (GLOBOCAN)2018. (B) Estimated cancer death in the worldwide based on GLOBOCAN 2018. (C) Estimated number of new cancer cases in different world areas based on GLOBOCAN 2018.
List of compounds isolated from marine sources with potential anticancer effect.
| Compound Name/Class | Marine Source | Type of Cancer | Mechanism | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apratoxin A/Peptide | Cervical cancer | Cell cycle inhibition IC50 = 2.2 nM | [ | |
| Brugine/Alkaloid | Sarcoma 180 and Lewis | Not reported | [ | |
| Fucoidan/Polysaccharides | Colon cancer | Inhibit the proliferation of arterial smooth muscle cells at conc. of 80 to 100 µg/mL | [ | |
| Lyngbyabellin B/p Peptide |
| Burkitt lymphoma cancer | Inhibit of cell growth IC50 = 0.02 µM | [ |
| Sansalvamide A/Peptide | Marine fungi | Pancreatic, colon, breast and prostate cancers | Inhibits protein complex formation | [ |
| Scutellarein 4′-methylether/Polyphenol | Choriocarcinoma cancer | Not reported | [ | |
| Phlorofucofuroecol A/Polyphenol | Brown seaweeds | Cancer | Not reported | [ |
| Phloroglucinol/polyphenol | Brown seaweed | Colon cancer | Induce DNA damage, and cell death at 300 µM | [ |
| Heparin/Heparan/Ppolysaccharides |
| Colon cancer | Inhibit the proliferation of arterial smooth muscle cells at 80 to 100 µg/mL | [ |
| Chondroitin-4-sulphate/Polysaccharides | Not reported | [ | ||
| Chondroitin-6-sulphate/Polysaccharides | Not reported | [ |
Figure 2Natural sources for cancer control.
List of clinical compounds and natural products isolated from marine sources with potential anticancer effect.
| Compound Name/Chemical Class | Marine Source | Type of Cancer | Mechanism | Clinical Status/Study Type | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AE-941/Peptide | Shark cartilage | Renal, lung cancer | Inhibition of gelatinolytic and elastinolytic activities of MMP-2, MMP-9, and MMP-12. The MMP’s are often over expressed in tumors and play an important role in the degradation of the (extracellular matrix allowing tumor growth and invasion (metastasis) | Drug, phase 3, Investigationa, Interventional | [ |
| Actinomycin/Peptide | Childhood cancer, Wilms tumor | Inhibition of RNA polymerase | Drug, phase 4, Interventional | [ | |
| Aplidine (Plitidepsin, Dehydrodide-mnin B)/Peptide | Pancreatic, stomach, bladder, and prostate cancers | Activation of protein kinase C | Drug Investigational | [ | |
| Leukemia Non Hodgkin Lymphoma | Induce the apoptotic cascade | Drug phase 2, Interventional | [ | ||
| Bryostatin-1/Polyketide | Metastatic solid tumors | Inhibition of growth and alteration of differentiation | Drug phase 1, 2 Interventional | [ | |
| Citarabine/Alkaloid | Sponge | Leukemia (acute non-lymphoblastic) | Inhibition of DNA synthesis | Drug Approved, Investigational | [ |
| Cryptophycins/Peptide | Not reported | Tubulin (inhibition of polymerization of microtuble) | Phase 1 | [ | |
| Dolastatin 10/Peptide | Pancreatic cancer | Inhibition of microtubules and pro-apoptotic effects | Drug phase 2, Interventional | [ | |
| ET-743 (Trabectedin, Ecteinascidin)/Alkaloid | Sarcomas and ovarian cancer | Binding to the minor groove of DNA interfering with cell division and genetic transcription processes and DNA repair machinery | Drug Approved, Investigational | [ | |
| Breast cancer | Alkylation ofguanine residues in the DNA minor groove | Drug phase 2, Interventional | [ | ||
| Eribulin (E7389)/Polyketide | Breast cancer | Activation of cellular apoptosis under anchorage-independent and -dependent cell culture conditions | Phase 1,2, Investigationa, Interventional | [ | |
| Advanced solid tumors, breast | Inhibition of growth phase of microtubules without affecting the shortening phase and sequesters tubulin into nonproductive aggregates | Drug, Approved, phase 2, Investigationa, Interventional | [ | ||
| Kahalalide F/Peptide | Prostate cancer | Induction of changes in lysosomal membrane | Phase 2 | [ | |
| PM02734/Peptide | Breast, colon, pancreas, lung and prostate | Antiproliferative | Drug, phase 1, Investigation, Interventional | [ | |
| Salinosporamide A (Marizomib®) (NPI-0052)/Polyketide | Prevention of proteins breakdown involved in signal transduction, which blocks the cancer cells growth and survival | Drug phase 1, Interventional | [ |
Figure 3Marine drugs and compounds used in clinical trials, its sources and chemical classes.
Figure 4Polyphenolic anti-cancer compounds of marine organisms.
Figure 5Polysaccharides of marine organisms against cancer.
Figure 6Alkaloids from marine organisms for anticancer.
Figure 7Anticancer peptides from marine organisms.
Figure 8Clinical compounds and drugs from marine organisms used in cancer treatment.
Figure 9Marine compounds plotted as red, orange, green and blue spheres indicating peptide, polyphenols, polysaccharides and alkaloids respectively. PCs; the red box indicates, PC1, the yellow box indicates, PC2, and the green box indicates, PC3.