| Literature DB >> 32245062 |
Abstract
Berberine is multifunctional natural product with potential to treat diverse pathological conditions. Its broad-spectrum anticancer effect through direct effect on cancer cell growth and metastasis have been established both in vitro and in vivo. The cellular targets that account to the anticancer effect of berberine are incredibly large and range from kinases (protein kinase B (Akt), mitogen activated protein kinases (MAPKs), cell cycle checkpoint kinases, etc.) and transcription factors to genes and protein regulators of cell survival, motility and death. The direct effect of berberine in cancer cells is however relatively weak and occur at moderate concentration range (10-100 µM) in most cancer cells. The poor pharmacokinetics profile resulting from poor absorption, efflux by permeability-glycoprotein (P-gc) and extensive metabolism in intestinal and hepatic cells are other dimensions of berberine's limitation as anticancer agent. This communication addresses the research efforts during the last two decades that were devoted to enhancing the anticancer potential of berberine. Strategies highlighted include using berberine in combination with other chemotherapeutic agents either to reduce toxic side effects or enhance their anticancer effects; the various novel formulation approaches which by order of magnitude improved the pharmacokinetics of berberine; and semisynthetic approaches that enhanced potency by up to 100-fold.Entities:
Keywords: anticancer; apoptosis; berberine; efficacy enhancement; formulation; metastasis; semi-synthesis; synergism
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32245062 PMCID: PMC7144379 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25061426
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1The structure of berberine and its natural derivatives, berberrubine and palmatine.
Cellular targets of berberine as an anticancer agent.
| Cell Type or Animal Model | Cellular Target | Main Endpoint Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| P-53-null leukemic (Jurkat and U937) cell lines | Decreased the mRNA expression of MDM2; enhance MDM2 self-ubiquitination; induce autophagy which could be inhibited by inhibitors 3-methyladenine. | Induction of autophagy in p53-null leukemic cells. | Liu et al. [ |
| Human colorectal (SW480) cancer cells | Induce apoptosis; inhibit cell surface expression of GRP78; modulate the expression of apoptosis regulators (Bax, Bcl-2 and c-Myc); effect reversed by overexpression of GRP78. | Inhibition of proliferation and cell migration. | Gong et al. [ |
| Breast cancer(MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231) cells | Induce cytotoxicity and G1 phase arrest; upregulate p21/cip1 and p27/kip1 and their nuclear localization by increasing their post-translational stability; effects mediated via inhibition of Akt. | Induction of cell death. | Tak et al. [ |
| HeLa cells | Downregulate NF-κB (30 µM) and affect various pathways (HIF1A/NFE2L2/AP-1) at 100 µM. | Inhibition of cell growth. | Belanova et al. [ |
| Glioblastoma (U87 and U251) cells in vitro and their xenografts in mice | Induce cytotoxicity and inhibit endothelial cell (HUVEC) migration; antitumour effect (survival rate and tumour size) in vivo; inhibit the phosphorylation of VEGFR2 and ERK. | Inhibition of angiogenesis. | Jin et al. [ |
| Glioblastoma U343 and pancreatic carcinoma MIA PaCa-2 cells vs. Human dermal fibroblasts as non-cancerous cells | Decrease citrate synthase and caspase-3 activity and autophagy; induce cell cycle arrest at G2 and senescence without autophagy in U343 cells; induce G1 arrest, senescence and autophagy in MIA PaCa-2 cells. | Induction of cell-dependent cell cycle arrest and autophagy. | Agnarelli et al. [ |
| Endometrial cancer (AN3 CA and HEC-1-A) cells in vitro; HEC-1-A xenograft in nude mice. | Suppress COX-2 (protein) PGE2 levels; effect dependent on upregulation of miR-101 via AP-1 modulation. | Inhibition of cell growth, migration, invasion and metastasis both in vitro and in vivo. | Wang and Zhang [ |
| Cholangiocarcinoma (KKU-213 and -214) cell lines | Induce G1 phase arrest; reduce cyclin D1, and cyclin E; reduce the expression and activation of STAT3 and NF-κB; suppress ERK 1/2. | Cell cycle arrest and growth inhibition. | Puthdee et al. [ |
| Preventive effect against DMBA-induced breast cancer in female rats. | Suppress lipid peroxidation (MDA level), pro-inflammatory cytokines (IL-1β, IL-6 and TNF-α), antioxidants (SOD and CAT, GSH and vitamin C) and NF-κB. | Inhibition of ductal carcinoma and invasiveness. | Karnam et al. [ |
| Cervical cancer HeLa cells | Inhibit cell proliferation (IC50 of 18 μM), tubulin and microtubule assembly; induce G2/M arrest; bind to tubulin at a single site with a Kd of 11 μM; inhibit the assembly of tubulin into microtubules and disrupt microtubules polymerization in the presence of glutamate and paclitaxel; form a stable complex with tubulin and bind at a novel site 24 Å from the colchicine site on the β-tubulin. | Inhibition of cancer cell proliferation by targeting mitotic microtubules. | Raghav et al. [ |
| Human Saos-2 and MG-63 osteosarcoma cells | Reduce the expression of caspase-1 and IL-1β. | Improvement of inflammatory microenvironment in addition to cytotoxicity. | Jin et al. [ |
| MCF-7 breast cancer cells | Suppress chemokine receptors (mRNA) expression (at 10–80 μg/mL) | Suppression of cell migration in wound healing assay. | Ahmadiankia et al. 2016 [ |
| FaDu head and neck squamous cell carcinoma cells | Upregulate apoptotic ligands (FasL and TRAIL); activate caspase-8, -7 and -3, PARP; upregulate pro-apoptotic factors, (Bax, Bad, Apaf-1, and the active form of caspase-9); downregulate anti-apoptotic factors (Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL); increase the expression of p53; downregulate VEGF, MMP-2 and MMP-9; suppress the phosphorylation ( | Induction of apoptosis and inhibition of cell migration. | Seo et al. [ |
| In vitro NIH-3T3 and C3H/10T1/2 mouse embryo fibroblast cells, HEK-293T human epithelial kidney cells, and LS174T colon cancer cells; allografting medulloblastoma into nude mice | Inhibit the hedgehog pathway and associated Smoothened; inhibits medulloblastoma cells (isolated from medulloblastoma in patch+/−; p53−/− mice) growth in hedgehog dependent manor. | Inhibition of cancer cell growth both in vitro and in vivo. | Wang et al. [ |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma (H22, HepG2 and Bel-7404) cells; H22 transplanted tumour model in mice | Reduce cell viability and induce apoptosis; suppress tumour growth in vivo; reduce cytosolic PLA2 and COX-2 protein levels; elevate the content ratio of arachidonic acid to PGE2. | Induction of apoptosis and tumour growth inhibition both in vitro and in vivo. | Li et al. [ |
| T47D and MCF7 cell lines. | Induce cytotoxicity (IC50 of 25 µM in both cell lines compared to doxorubicin as 250 nM and 500 nM in T47D and MCF-7 respectively); induce G2/M arrest in the T47D cells, but G0/G1 arrest in the MCF-7 cells; doxorubicin induced G2/M arrest in both cell lines. | Induction of cell cycle arrest and cytotoxicity. | Barzegar et al. [ |
| BGC-823 gastric cancer cells; xenograft in nude mice injected with human gastric cancer cells | Increase the expression level of cleaved PARP and caspase-3; impair Δψm; inhibit the Akt/mTOR/p70S6/S6 pathway; inhibit Akt activation. | Induction of apoptosis in vitro and tumour growth inhibition in vivo. | Yi et al. [ |
| KB oral cancer cells | Increase the expression of the death receptor ligand, FasL; activate pro-apoptotic factors (caspase-8, -9 and -3 and PARP, Bax, Bad and Apaf-1); suppress anti-apoptotic factors (Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL); pan-caspase inhibitor (VAD-FMK) inhibit the activation of caspase-3 and PARP by berberine. | Induce apoptosis through both extrinsic death receptor- and intrinsic mitochondrial-dependent signalling pathways. | Kim et al. [ |
| Prostate cancer (LNCaP, DU-145, and PC-3) cells | Suppress a panel of mesenchymal genes (high BMP7, NODAL and Snail) expression that regulate the developmental epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition. | Inhibition of migration and invasiveness of highly metastatic cancer cells. | Liu et al. [ |
| Human ovarian (SKOV3) cancer cells | Downregulate anti-apoptotic genes (BCL-2 and survivin); up-regulate pro-apoptotic gene (Bax). | Inhibition of cell proliferation and induction of apoptosis. | Jin et al. [ |
| Pancreatic cancer (PANC-1 and MIA-PaCa2) cell lines | Induce G1-phase arrest through mechanisms related to ROS production and caspase 3/7 activation. | Induction of cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. | Park et al. [ |
| Human prostate (LnCaP and PC-3) cancer cell lines | Induce G1 phase arrest; inhibit the expression of PSA and the activation of EGFR. | Inhibition of cell growth and induction of apoptosis. | Huang et al. [ |
| MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells | Inhibit IL-8 secretion by suppressing PI3K, JAK2, NF-κB and AP-1; downregulate gene expression of MMP-2, EGF, E-cadherin, bFGF and fibronectin; induce G2/M arrest and cell apoptosis in an IL-8-independent manner; activate p38 MAPK and JNK while suppressing JAK2, p85 PI3K, Akt and NF-κB. | Inhibition of cell proliferation and cell invasion induced by IL-8. | Li et al. [ |
| MG-63 human osteosarcoma cells | Induce DNA damage and apoptosis. | Induction of apoptosis. | Zhu et al. [ |
| Human multiple myeloma cell line U266 | Suppress the expression of DNA methyltransferases (DNMT1 and DNMT3B) which triggers hypomethylation of TP53 by changing the DNA methylation level and the alteration of p53 dependent signal pathway. | Induction of apoptosis. | Qing et al. [ |
| p53-Null leukaemia cells | Induce apoptotic cell death via inhibition of XIAP protein; inhibit MDM2 expression. | Induction of apoptosis. | Liu et al. [ |
| Human non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cells | Inhibit AP-2α and AP-2β expression and their binding on hTERT promoters; inhibit hTERT expression; suppress NF-κB mobilisation and binding to COX-2 promoter; inhibit COX-2 expression; downregulate HIF-1α and VEGF expression; inhibit Akt and ERK phosphorylation; induce cytochrome-c release from mitochondria; promote caspase and PARP activity; modulate Bax and Bcl-2 expression. | Inhibition of cell proliferation, migration, and colony formation, and induction of apoptosis. | Fu et al. [ |
| Human hepatoma Bel7402 cells. | Induce G1 cell cycle arrest; effect enhanced by calmodulin inhibitors; decrease the phosphorylation of calmodulin kinase II; block MEK1 activation and p27 protein degradation. | Cell cycle arrest and inhibition of cell growth | Ma et al. [ |
| MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells | Downregulate MMP2 (activities) and MMP9 (expression); inhibit Akt, NF-κB and AP-1; supress Akt expression via modulating its mRNA expression and protein degradation. | Potential for inhibition of cancer metastasis | Kuo et al. [ |
| Thyroid cancer 8505C and TPC1cell lines. | Induce cell cycle arrest at the G0/G1 phase (TPC1 cells); upregulate p-27; induce cell death (IC50 of 10 µM). | Inhibition of growth and induction of apoptosis | Park et al. [ |
| Human epithelial ovarian carcinoma (OVCAR-3 and SKOV-3) cell lines | Induce cytotoxicity and G2/M phase (OVCAR-3 cells) and S phase (SKOV-3 cells) arrest; upregulate p27. | Inhibition of cell proliferation | Park et al. [ |
| Angiogenesis using B16F-10 melanoma cells and capillary formation in C57BL/6 mice; angiogenesis model of endothelial cells from rat aortic ring | Inhibition in tumour-directed capillary formation and in various proangiogenic factors (VEGF, IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α, and GM-CSF); increase the serum levels of antitumor factors (IL-2 and TIMP); suppress NF-ĸB, c-Fos, CREB, and ATF-2; inhibit the expression (mRNA) levels of proangiogenic factors (COX-2, iNOS, and HIF). | Inhibition of angiogenesis both in vitro and in vivo; inhibition of endothelial cell motility, migration, tube formation, and vessel sprouting. | Hamsa and Kuttan [ |
| Human ductal breast epithelial tumour (T47D) cell line | Decrease COX-2, iNOS and survivin proteins. | Inhibition of cell viability and induction of apoptosis. | Pazhang et al. [ |
| Human colon cancer (HCT-8) cell line | Induce cell cycle arrest at S phase; upregulate p-regulated mRNA and/or protein expressions of Fas, FasL, TNF-α and caspase-3; down-regulate pro-caspase-3; decrease Bcl-2 and increase of Bax (mRNA and protein) expressions. | Inhibition of cell growth and induce apoptosis. | Xu et al. [ |
| Non-small cell human lung (A549 as a wild-type p53, and H1299 as p53-deficient) cancer cells in vitro and H1299 tumour xenograft growth athymic nude mice. | p53-Dependent cell death; disrupt Δψm, reduce the levels of Bcl-2, Bcl-xl while increasing in Bax, Bak; activate caspase-3. | Inhibition of cell proliferation and induction of apoptotic cell death in vitro and inhibition of tumour growth in vivo. | Katiyar et al. [ |
| Human hepatocellular carcinoma (HepG2) cells in vitro and in vivo | Increase the expression level of Fas and P53, cause depolarization of mitochondrial membrane and decrease Δψm; activate caspase-3, -8, and -9. | Reduce cell growth and induce apoptosis; reduce tumour growth rates in mice. | Wang et al. [ |
| Human neuroblastoma SK-N-SH and SK-N-MC cells | More cytotoxic to p53-expressing SK-N-SH (IC50 = 37 μM) than p53-deficient SK-N-MC cells (IC50 ≥ 100 μM); induce cell cycle arrest at G0/G1 phase; decrease G0/G1 phase-associated CDK (cyclin D1, cyclin E, Cdk2, and Cdk4) expression; increase apoptotic gene expression and activate caspase-3 in susceptible cells. | Induction of apoptotic cell death in cancer but not in normal cortical neuronal cells. | Choi et al. [ |
| Human gastric SNU-5 cancer cells | Downregulate MMP-1 -2, and -9 (no effect on the level of MMP-7); inhibit gene expression for MMP-1, -2 and -9 (no effect on MMP-7); induce ROS production. | Reduction of cell viability. | Lin et al. [ |
| Human oral squamous cell carcinoma (HSC-3) cells | Induce mainly G0/G1-phase arrest; increase intracellular levels of ROS and Ca2+; reduce Δψm. | Inhibition of cell growth and induction of apoptosis. | Lin et al. [ |
| Human cervical cancer Ca Ski cells | Increase the ratio of p53 and Bax/Bcl-2 proteins; increase the levels of ROS and Ca2+; disrupt Δψm; promote caspase-3 activity; induce the expression of transcription factor GADD153. | Induction of apoptosis | Lin et al. [ |
| Human colonic carcinoma SW620 cells | Activate caspases (-3 and -8), cleavage of PARP and the release of cytochrome-c; downregulate the expression of anti-apoptosis factor (c-IAP1, Bcl-2, and Bcl-XL); increase the phosphorylation of JNK and p38 MAPK; induce ROS generation; increase the cellular levels of c-Jun and FasL. | Induction of apoptosis | Hsu et al. [ |
| Murine leukaemia WEHI-3 cells in vitro; and in vivo WEHI-3 cancer cells injected in mice | Induce cytotoxicity in cancer cells in vitro; promote differentiation of the B-cells precursors in vivo; reduce Mac-3 and CD11b markers (inhibit differentiation of precursors of macrophages and granulocytes); no effect on the CD14- and CD19-augmented (promotion of B-cells precursors differentiation). | Induction of cytotoxicity in vitro and reduction of spleen weight in cancer bearing animals in vivo. | Yu et al. [ |
| Melanoma B16 cells and U937 cells | B16 cells (IC100 < 1 μg/mL) much more sensitive than U937 cells (IC100 < 100 μg/mL) U937 cells; apoptotic cell death in U937 and necrosis in NB16 cells | Cytotoxic to cancer cells | Letasiová et al. [ |
Figure 2Anticancer agents that showed positive interaction and pharmacological efficacy enhancement when combined with berberine.
Formulation technologies designed to improve the bioavailability and efficacy of berberine as anticancer agent.
| Preparation | Characteristics | Assay Model & Main Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nanosized carbon nanoparticle-C60 fullerene (C60) | Water dispersions of noncovalent C60-Ber nanocomplexes in the 1:2, 1:1, and 2:1 molar ratios. | Promote Ber intracellular uptake; higher antiproliferative potential towards CCRF-CEM cells free - Berberine < 1:2 < 1:1 < 2:1 molar ratio preparations; activate caspase 3/7; cell cycle arrest at sub-G1 phase; induce apoptosis. | Grebinyk et al. [ |
| Anionic and cationic vitamin E-TPGS mixed polymeric phospholipid micellar vehicles | Lipid-based nanocarriers, amphiphilic mixed micelles composed of polymeric phospholipid conjugates and PEG-succinate ester of tocopherol. | Human prostate cancer cell lines (PC3 and LNPaC)—enhance apoptosis induction with 30-fold potential improvement of pharmacokinetics. | Yao and Elbayoumi [ |
| Novel mitochondria targeting surface charge-reversal polymeric nanoparticles | Vitamin B6-oligomeric hyaluronic acid (OHA)-dithiodipropionic acid-berberine preparation; berberine conjugated with OHA and OHA further conjugated to B6. Micelles of 172.9 nm formed by formulating conjugates with Cur-loaded nanoparticles. | Induce cytotoxicity in vitro against PANC-1 cells and tumour growth in nude mice bearing PANC-1 cells xenograft; subcellular drug distribution shows mitochondria as target. | Fang et al. [ |
| Planar side arm-tethered β-cyclodextrin encapsulation | Fluorenyl derivative of β-cyclodextrin used to encapsulate berberine. | Strongly binds with duplex and G-quadruplex DNAs although its association with the cavity of β-cyclodextrin diminishes the binding strength. | Suganthi et al. [ |
| Cationic γ-cyclodextrin derivative | A cationic derivative of γ-cyclodextrin synthesised through modification with propylenediamine; mucoadhesive with resistance to digestion by ∝-amylase. | Localised in lysosomes with cytotoxicity twice higher than berberine in murine melanoma (B16-F10) and 4T1 cells. | Popiołek et al. [ |
| PLGA nanoparticles | PLGA-doxorubicin conjugate used for encapsulation of berberine. | Anti-proliferative against MDA-MB-231 and T47D breast cancer cell lines were observed with IC50 of 1.94 ± 0.22 and 1.02 ± 0.36 μM; alter mitochondrial permeability and arrest cell cycle at sub G1 phase; 14-fold increase in half-life of berberine in rats. | Khan et al. [ |
| Self-carried berberine microrods | Carrier prepared by mixing trimethylamine with berberine hydrochloride in DMSO to form about 20–100 μm length and 5–20 μm width irregular size product. | Hepatocellular carcinoma (HepG2, SMMC-7721, Hep3B, H22 cells) and normal cell lines (HL-7702 cells, HUVEC cells, C2C12 cells, and H9C2 cells) used for cytotoxicity assay; With about 40 µg/mL IC50 value, about twice more selective than berberine in cancer cells. | Zheng et al. [ |
| Polyethyleneimine (PEI)-cholesterol (PC) berberine nanocarrier complexed with miR-122 | Berberine incorporated to PC with further electrostatic complex with miR-122; good drug loading (8.4%) and release (63.0) capacity of nanoparticles of about 146 nm. | Decrease OSCC cells invasion and migration in transwell assay when compared with single drug treatments. | Lei et al. [ |
| Berberine with PEGylated Liposomal Doxorubicin (PEG-lip-DOX) | Berberine combined with polyethylene glycolated liposomal doxorubicin. | Inhibit the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) expression in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs); inhibit (via i.v.) tumour growth in Meth A sarcoma-transplanted mice; effect stronger than berberine or PEG-lip-DOX alone. | Yahuafai et al. [ |
| Zinc oxide-based nanoparticles | Berberine and zinc oxide (ZnO) combined through facile blending at the ratio of 39:61 to form 200–300 nm size nanoparticles. | Enhance antiproliferative activity in A549 (human lung adenocarcinoma) cells; no obvious severe hepatotoxicity, renal toxicity, and haemotoxicity in rats by i.v. | Kim et al. [ |
| Folic acid- and berberine-loaded silver nanomaterial (FA-PEG@BBR-AgNPs) | Encapsulating berberine on citrate-capped silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) through electrostatic interactions (berberine-AgNPs) followed by conjugation with polyethylene glycol-functionalized folic acid through hydrogen bonding interactions. | Enhance apoptosis in MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells; induce ROS; modulate PI3K, AKT, Ras, Raf, ERK, VEGF, HIF1α, Bcl-2, Bax, cytochrome-c, caspase-9, and caspase-3; inhibit tumour growth in vivo when administered intravenously into MDA-MB-231 tumour-bearing athymic nude mice. | Bhanumathi et al. [ |
| Hypoxia-specific chemo-targeting iron-oxide nanoparticle–Berberine complexes | Hypoxic cell-sensitizer sanazole (SAN) -directed targeting of cytotoxic drug berberine and iron-oxide nanoparticle complexes. | Reduce tumour volume in mice bearing solid tumour in hind limb; increase DNA damage; suppress the levels of transcription of HIF-1α, VEGF, Akt and Bcl2; increase Bax and caspases expressions. | Sreeja and Krishnan [ |
| Berberine-loaded Janus nanocarriers for magnetic field-enhanced therapy | Janus magnetic mesoporous silica nanoparticles (Fe3O4-mSiO2 nanoparticles): Fe3O4 head for magnetic targeting and a mesoporous SiO2 body for pH-dependent berberine delivery. | Magnetic field-induced endocytosis and pH-responsive drug release leading to improved cytotoxicity against hepatocellular HepG2 carcinoma cells. | Wang et al. [ |
| Dendrimer encapsulated and conjugated delivery of berberine | Dendrimer (G4 PAMAM) encapsulated and conjugated berberine formulations of 100–200 nm size; entrapment efficiency of 29.9% or percentage conjugation of 37.49%. | Higher drug payload in conjugation method; sustained and efficient release pattern in vitro; higher anticancer effect in vitro against MCF-7 and MDA-MB-468 breast cancer cells; no haemolytic effect ex vivo; improved pharmacokinetic in rats with about 2-fold improvement in half-life (t1/2). | Gupta et al. [ |
| Silver nanoparticles | Nanosize silver particles with berberine chloride. | Human tongue squamous carcinoma SCC-25–IC50 of 5.19 μg/mL; cell cycle arrest at G0/G1 phase; increase of Bax/Bcl-2 ratio gene expression. | Dziedzic et al. [ |
| Graphene oxide-based berberine nanocarrier | Electric-sensitive drug release and redox sensitive graphene oxide nanocomposite loading berberine. | - | Yu et al. [ |
| Solid lipid nanoparticle encapsulation. | Solid lipid nanoparticle (SLN) with particle size of 81 nm and zeta potential of 28.67 ± 0.71 mV. | More cell proliferation inhibitory effect on MCF-7, HepG 2, and A549 cancer cells than berberine; induce cell cycle arrest, and apoptosis. | Wang et al. [ |
| Liposomal berberine | Polyethenyl glycol (PEG) with maximum encapsulation efficiency berberine as 14%. | 2.5-times more active in inhibiting the growth of HepG2 cells than berberine (IC50 of 1.67 μg/mL vs. 4.23 μg/mL); induce apoptosis through the caspase/mitochondria-dependent pathway; lower rate of elimination in both plasma and tissues; improved antitumour effect in vivo when tested in tumour xenograft mice bearing HepG2-induced tumour. | Lin et al. [ |
Figure 3Berberine-9-O-derivatives [124,125,126,127].
Figure 4Berberine-3-O- and 9-O-derivatives [128,129].
Figure 5Further berberine- 9-O-derivatives [135,136,137].
Figure 6Other berberine hybrids [139,140,141].
Figure 7Berberine-9-N derivatives.
Figure 8Berberine-13-C-phenyl derivatives.
Figure 9Other 13-C-berberine derivatives.
Figure 10N-Mannich base berberine derivatives.
Figure 11Berberine-13-alkyl derivatives.
Figure 12Structure of A35.
Figure 13Research approaches over the last two decades that focus on improving the anticancer potential of berberine.