| Literature DB >> 32116665 |
Amit S Choudhari1, Pallavi C Mandave2, Manasi Deshpande3, Prabhakar Ranjekar4, Om Prakash5,6.
Abstract
Cancer is a severe health problem that continues to be a leading cause of death worldwide. Increasing knowledge of the molecular mechanisms underlying cancer progression has led to the development of a vast number of anticancer drugs. However, the use of chemically synthesized drugs has not significantly improved the overall survival rate over the past few decades. As a result, new strategies and novel chemoprevention agents are needed to complement current cancer therapies to improve efficiency. Naturally occurring compounds from plants known as phytochemicals, serve as vital resources for novel drugs and are also sources for cancer therapy. Some typical examples include taxol analogs, vinca alkaloids such as vincristine, vinblastine, and podophyllotoxin analogs. These phytochemicals often act via regulating molecular pathways which are implicated in growth and progression of cancer. The specific mechanisms include increasing antioxidant status, carcinogen inactivation, inhibiting proliferation, induction of cell cycle arrest and apoptosis; and regulation of the immune system. The primary objective of this review is to describe what we know to date of the active compounds in the natural products, along with their pharmacologic action and molecular or specific targets. Recent trends and gaps in phytochemical based anticancer drug discovery are also explored. The authors wish to expand the phytochemical research area not only for their scientific soundness but also for their potential druggability. Hence, the emphasis is given to information about anticancer phytochemicals which are evaluated at preclinical and clinical level.Entities:
Keywords: anticancer; clinical; medicinal plants; phytochemicals; preclinical
Year: 2020 PMID: 32116665 PMCID: PMC7025531 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2019.01614
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
List of commercially available plant derived drugs on various diseases.
| Drug | Class of drug | Plant source | Disease | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apomorphine | Dopamine receptor agonist |
| Parkinson | ( |
| Arteether | Sesquiterpene trioxane lactone |
| Malaria | ( |
| Galantamine | Amaryllidaceae alkaloid |
| Alzheimer | ( |
| Nitisinone | Mesotrione |
| Hepatorenal tyrosinemia | ( |
| Paclitaxel | Taxane diterpene |
| Cancer | ( |
| Tiotropium | Muscarinic receptor antagonist |
| Asthma and COPD | ( |
COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Figure 1Chemical structures of some anticancer phytochemicals in preclinical trials.
Phytochemicals in pre-clinical trials for cancer treatment.
| Phytochemical (compound class) | Botanical name (family) | Molecular targets | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6-Shogaol (phenylpropanoid) |
| Akt and STAT signaling pathway | ( |
| Allicin (organosulfurs) |
| STAT3 signaling pathway | ( |
| Alpinumisoflavone (pyranoisoflavone) |
| Nrf2, NQO-1, HO-1, miR-101, and Akt signaling | ( |
| Andrographolide (diterpenoid) |
| HIF-1α, VEGF, and PI3K pathway | ( |
| Apigenin (flavonoid) |
| Intrinsic apoptosis pathway | ( |
| Baicalein (flavonoid) |
| MAPK, ERK, and p38 signaling pathways | ( |
| Baicalin (flavonoid) |
| MAPK, ERK, and p38 signaling pathways | ( |
| Curcumin (phytopolyphenol) |
| Modulates cell signaling and gene expression regulatory pathways | ( |
| Decursin and Decursinol (Coumarin) |
| Not mentioned | ( |
| Dicumarol |
| Intrinsic apoptosis pathway | ( |
| Epigallocatechin (flavonoids) |
| Inhibit cell proliferation and apoptosis | ( |
| Emodin (resin) |
| PI3K/AKT and MAPK signaling pathways | ( |
| Genistein (isoflavonoid) |
| WNT/β-catenin and Akt signaling pathway | ( |
| Gingerol (polyphenol) |
| Intrinsic apoptosis pathway | ( |
| Glycyrrhizin (triterpenes) |
| TxA2 and JAK/STAT signaling pathway | ( |
| Hispidulin (flavone) |
| Intrinsic apoptosis pathway | ( |
| HS-1793 (stilbenoid) |
| HIF-1α, VEGF, Ki-67 and CD31 | ( |
| Licochalcone A (chalcone) |
| Cyclins and CDKs | ( |
| Nimbolide (triterpene) |
| PI3K/AKT/mTOR and ERK signaling | ( |
| Physapubescin B (Steroid) |
| Ki-67, Cdc25C, and PARP | ( |
| Pterostilbene (polyphenol) |
| Mitochondrial mediated apoptosis; ERK and STAT3 signaling | ( |
| Resveratrol (phenol) |
| Regulating cell cycle and apoptosis pathways | ( |
| Sulforaphane (organosulfur) |
| Cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. Targets: caspase 8, p21, hsp90 | ( |
| Thymol (monoterpenoids) |
| Mitochondrial mediated apoptosis | ( |
| Thymoquinone (quinone) |
| STAT3 and associated protein | ( |
| Ursolic acid (triterpenoids) |
| Ki-67, CD31, and miR-29a | ( |
| Withaferin-A (phytosterols) |
| AKT signaling FOX03a-Par-4 cell death pathway, ERK, and p38 pathway | ( |
Figure 2Chemical structures of some anticancer agents in clinical trials.
List of phytochemicals currently in clinical trial on various cancers.
| Phytochemical | Class of compound | Type of cancer | Assessment | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Berberine (alkaloid) |
| Colorectal cancer | Prevention of recurrence | NCT03281096* |
| Curcumin (polylphenol) |
| Advanced and metastatic breast cancer | Quality of life, safety in combination, progression free survival, time to disease Progression, and time to treatment failure | NCT03072992* |
| Epigallocatechin (flavonoids) |
| Colorectal cancer | Change in methylation pattern compare to baseline | NCT02891538* |
| Lycopene (carotenoids) |
| Metastatic colorectal cancer | Effectiveness in reducing skin toxicity alone or in combination with panitumumab. Pharmacokinetics. | NCT03167268* |
| Quercetin (carotenoids) | Prostate cancer | EGCG, ECG, quercetin, and their methylated metabolites in prostate tissue and plasma. Enzyme activity expression of COMT, DNMT1, and MRP1. Inter-individual variation in genotype of COMT | NCT01912820* | |
| Resveratrol (stilbenoid) |
| Low-grade GI neuroendocrine tumors | Notch1 activation, toxicity | NCT01476592* |
| Sulforaphane (isothiocyanate) |
| Former smokers with a high risk of developing lung cancer | Bronchial dysplasia index, cell proliferation marker Ki-67, apoptosis markers including caspase-3 and TUNEL | NCT03232138* |
*Indicates reference found at www.clinicaltrials.gov with corresponding identifier code (NCT).
Figure 3Chemical structures of some anticancer agents in clinical use.
Compounds used for cancer treatment.
| Class of phytochemical | Pharmacological action | Type of cancer | Molecular targets | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Vinblastine Vincristine Vindesine Vinflunine Vinorelbine | Inhibit microtubule polymerization and assembly, leading to metaphase arrest and cell death. | Non-small-cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC), breast, lung, leukemia, Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphomas, testicular carcinoma, Kaposi’s sarcoma, and second-line transitional cell carcinoma of the urothelium (TCCU) | Tubulin | ( |
|
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| Cabazitaxel Docetaxel Paclitaxel | Inhibit microtubule function resulting in cell cycle arrest and aberrant mitosis | NSCLC, head and neck, breast, prostate, gastric adenocarcinoma | Tubulin | ( |
|
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| Etoposide Teniposide | Inhibits DNA synthesis by forming a complex with topoisomerase II and DNA. | Osteosarcoma, NSCLC cervical, nasopharyngeal, colon, breast, prostate, and testicular cancer | Topoisomerase II | ( |
|
| ||||
| Irinotecan Topotecan | Stabilizes topoisomerase I-DNA complex thereby preventing religation of single strand breaks resulting in lethal double-stranded breaks in DNA. | Ovarian, cervical, colorectal, and small cell lung cancer (SCLC) | Topoisomerase I | ( |
|
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| Combretastatin A4 | Inhibits polymerization of tubulin causing disruption of the tumor endothelial cells lining the tumor vasculature | Polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy, anaplastic thyroid cancers | Tubulin | ( |
| Homoharringtonine | Binds to large ribosomal subunit, which affects chain elongation and prevents protein synthesis | Chronic myeloid leukemia | Ribosomoal protein | ( |
| Ingenol mebutate | Rapid induction of cell death and activation of inflammatory response | Actinic keratosis | Protein kinase C | ( |