| Literature DB >> 32545187 |
Sankhadip Bose1, Sabyasachi Banerjee2, Arijit Mondal3, Utsab Chakraborty2, Joshua Pumarol4, Courtney R Croley4, Anupam Bishayee4.
Abstract
Cancer is a prevalent cause of mortality around the world. Aberrated activation of Janus kinase (JAK)/signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) signaling pathway promotes tumorigenesis. Natural agents, including phytochemicals, exhibit potent anticancer activities via various mechanisms. However, the therapeutic potency of phytoconstituents as inhibitors of JAK/STAT signaling against cancer has only come into focus in recent days. The current review highlights phytochemicals that can suppress the JAK/STAT pathway in order to impede cancer cell growth. Various databases, such as PubMed, ScienceDirect, Web of Science, SpringerLink, Scopus, and Google Scholar, were searched using relevant keywords. Once the authors were in agreement regarding the suitability of a study, a full-length form of the relevant article was obtained, and the information was gathered and cited. All the complete articles that were incorporated after the literature collection rejection criteria were applied were perused in-depth and material was extracted based on the importance, relevance, and advancement of the apprehending of the JAK/STAT pathway and their relation to phytochemicals. Based on the critical and comprehensive analysis of literature presented in this review, phytochemicals from diverse plant origins exert therapeutic and cancer preventive effects, at least in part, through regulation of the JAK/STAT pathway. Nevertheless, more preclinical and clinical research is necessary to completely comprehend the capability of modulating JAK/STAT signaling to achieve efficient cancer control and treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Janus kinase; cancer; natural compounds; signal transducer and activator of transcription; targeted therapy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32545187 PMCID: PMC7348822 DOI: 10.3390/cells9061451
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Schematic representation of Janus kinase (JAK)/signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) signaling pathway activation leading to upregulation of genes involved in survival and tumor cell proliferation. Various steps in the JAK/STAT pathway: I: Cytokine binds to receptor and receptors dimerize. II: JAKs are phosphorylated by each other. III: JAK phosphorylates the receptor, forming phosphotyrosine binding sites for STAT’s SH2 domain. IV: STAT binds to the receptor. JAK phosphorylates STAT which changes the conformation of STAT and stimulates its release. V: Phosphorylated STAT dissociates from the receptor and dimerizes. VI: Phosphorylated STAT translocates into the nucleus. VII. Phosphorylated STAT binds to DNA. VIII. Stimulation of DNA transcription of target genes.
Figure 2Structures of phenolics and polyphenols with anticancer activities correlated with inhibition of the JAK/STAT pathway.
Potential anticancer activities of phenolics and polyphenols correlated with inhibition of the JAK/STAT signaling pathway.
| Phytochemical Name | Sources | Anticancer Effect | Mechanism of Action | EC50/IC50 | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Resveratrol | Inhibited proliferation in human epidermoid carcinoma (A431) cells | ┴ Phosphorylation of JAK that prevented STAT1 phosphorylation | 40 µM | Madan et al., 2008 [ | |
| Inhibited proliferation in human multiple myeloma (U266 and RPMI 8226) cells | ┴ Constitutive and inducible STAT3 activation | 50 and 50 µM | Bhardwaj et al., 2007 [ | ||
| Inhibited tumor growth, induction of cytotoxicity, cell cycle arrest of v-Src-transformed mouse fibroblasts (NIH3T3/v-Src) at G0-G1 phase. Showed cytotoxicity in human breast cancer (MDA-MB-231), pancreatic carcinoma (Panc-1), and prostate carcinoma (DU145) cells | ┴ Src tyrosine kinase activity; | 40, 70. and 25 µM | Kotha et al., 2006 [ | ||
| Curcumin | Induction of cytotoxicity in human multiple myeloma (U266, RPMI 8226, and MM.1S) cells | ┴ Constitutive and IL-6-inducible STAT3 phosphorylation; | 13.8, 12.7 and 10 µM | Bharti et al., 2003 [ | |
| Inhibited proliferation in human small cell lung cancer (NCI-H446 and NCI-1688) cells | ┴ STAT3 phosphorylation; ↓ STAT3 downstream gene expression | 15 and 15 µM | Yang et al., 2012 [ | ||
| Antitumor activity in T-cell leukemia, treatment causes growth arrest with increase in apoptosis | ┴ Activation of the JAK/STAT pathway; | Not specified | Rajasingh et al., 2006 [ | ||
| Ascochlorin |
| Inhibited cell migration and invasion in U373MG and A172 cancer cells | ┴ MMP-9 expression, | 10 μM | Cho et al., 2018 [ |
| Bergamottin | Grape juice, lime, lemon, and bergamot oils | Antitumor activity in U266 cells, induction of substantial apoptosis at sub-G1 stage | ┴ Constitutive STAT3 activation; | 100 μM | Kim et al., 2014 [ |
| Capillarisin | Negative regulator of growth and metastasis in human multiple myeloma cells; induces apoptosis; downregulated the expression level of various STAT3-regulated proteins | ┴ Constitutive and inducible STAT3 activation at tyrosine 705; | Not mentioned | Lee et al., 2014 [ | |
| Bavachin | Induced cytotoxicity in multiple myeloma cell lines; induced apoptosis by activation of caspase-3 and caspase-9; | ┴ Activation of STAT3; | 10 μM | Takeda et al., 2018 [ | |
| Epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG) | Anticancer activity in human pancreatic (AsPC-1 and PANC-1), breast (T47D), head and neck cancer (YCU-H861) cells | ┴ Phosphorylation and expression of both JAK3 and STAT3 proteins | 40, 40, 14.17 µM, 1 µg/mL | Tang et al., 2012 [ | |
| Emodin | Stimulated the antiproliferation activity of interferon α/β in cervical carcinoma cell line (HeLa) and antitumor activity in Huh7 (hepatocellular cancer cell)-bearing mice in vivo | ┴ STAT3 activation, | Not specified, 1.22 μM | He et al., 2016 [ | |
| Chalcone | Induced cytotoxicity in Bovine aortic endothelial cells (BAEC) | ┴ IL-6-induced and LPS-induced STAT3 phosphorylation | 0.0069 µM | Liu et al., 2007 [ | |
| Formononetin | Inhibited proliferation and invasion of colon carcinoma cell lines HCT116 and SW1116, cell cycle arrest at the G0/G1 stage | ┴ STAT3 signaling pathway; | Not specified | Wang et al., 2018 [ | |
| Garcinol | Induced cytotoxicity in hepatocellular carcinoma cells, | ┴ Constitutive and IL-6 inducible STAT3 activation | Not specified | Sethi et al., 2014 [ | |
| Cardamonin | Antitumor activity in U87 cells (in vitro) and CD133+ GSCs (in vitro and in vivo); induced apoptosis | ┴ STAT3 signaling pathway; | Not specified | Wu et al., 2015 [ | |
| Caffeic acid or its derivative 3-(3,4-dihydroxy-phenyl)-acrylic acid 2-(3,4-dihydroxy-phenyl)-ethyl ester (CADPE) | Induction of cytotoxicity in human renal carcinoma (Caki-1) cells | ┴ STAT3 phosphorylation; | 30 µM | Jung et al., 2007 [ | |
| Silibinin | Induction of cytotoxicity in human prostate cancer (DU145) cells | ┴ Constitutively active STAT3, ↑ apoptosis and ┴ constitutive STAT3–DNA binding | 50 µM | Agarwal et al., 2007 [ | |
| Suppressed transcriptional function in urethane-induced lung tumors in A/J mice | ┴ STAT3 phosphorylation | Not specified | Tyagi et al., 2009 [ | ||
| Butein | Exhibited antitumor activity in human hepatocellular carcinoma (HepG2 and SNU-387) | ┴ Constitutive and IL-6- induced STAT3 activation by inactivating JAK1 and c-Src. | 50 and 50 µM | Bhutani et al., 2007 [ | |
| 5,7-Dihydroxyflavone | Inhibited proliferation HepG2 tumor xenografts in vivo | ↓ Phosphorylation of STAT3 | 20 µM | Zhang et al., 2013 [ | |
| Honokiol | Inhibited proliferation, induced apoptosis in human leukemic cell lines (HEL and THP1), multiple myeloma cells (U266) and murine myeloid cell (32D) | ┴ Constitutive and inducible STAT3 activation; | 40 µM | Bi et al., 2015 [ | |
| Casticin | Inhibited proliferation, induced apoptosis, cell cycle arrest at G2/M phase in colon (Panc-1), breast (MCF-7), lung (A549), gastric (SGC-7901), ovarian (SKOV3), liver (HepG2), leukemia (K562) cancer cells | ┴ Constitutively active STAT3 and modulates STAT3 activation by modifying upstream STAT3 regulator activity. | 10, 8.5, 14.3, 1, 2.18, 30, 5.95 µM | Chen et al., 2011 [ | |
| Induced apoptosis in 786-O, YD-8, and HN-9 cancer cells | ┴ constitutively activation of STAT3; | 5 μM | Lee et al., 2019 [ | ||
| Apigenin | Anticancer and antitumor activity in colon cancer (HCT-116) cells | ┴ Phosphorylation of STAT3 and consequently downregulated the antiapoptotic proteins Bcl-xL and Mcl-1 | 47.33 µM | Ozbey et al., 2018 [ | |
| Anticancer activity in BT-474 (breast cancer) cells | ┴ JAK/STAT pathway | Not specified | Ozbey et al., 2018 [ | ||
| Wedelolactone | Inhibited proliferation, induced apoptosis, causes cell cycle arrest at S and G2/M phases in breast (MDA-MB-231) and HepG2 cancer cells | ┴ STAT1 dephosphorylation and prolonging STAT1 activation, ┴ T-cell protein tyrosine phosphatase | Not specified in MDA-MB-231; | Benes et al., 2011 [ |
Various symbols (↑, ↓ and ┴) indicate increase, decrease and inhibition in the obtained variables, respectively.
Figure 3Structures of the terpenoids with anticancer activities related to inhibition of the JAK/STAT pathwa.
Potential anticancer activities of terpenoids related to inhibition of the JAK/STAT signaling pathway.
| Phytochemical Name | Sources | Anticancer Effect | Mechanism of Action | EC50 /IC50 | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cucurbitacin B | Induced cytotoxicity in human pancreatic cancer (MiaPaCa-2, AsPC-1) cells | ┴ JAK2, ┴ STAT3, and ┴ STAT5 activation | 0.278, 0.017 μM | Thoennissen et al., 2009 [ | |
| Induced cytotoxicity in leukemia K562 cells | ┴ STAT3 activation | 50 µM | Chan et al., 2010 [ | ||
| Cucurbitacin E | Induced cytotoxicity in human bladder cancer (T24) cells | ↓ Levels of phosphorylated STAT3 (p-STAT3) | 1012 nM | Huang et al., 2012 | |
| Cucurbitacin I | Induced cytotoxicity in human lung adenocarcinoma (A549) cells | ↓ Phosphotyrosine STAT3, ↓ JAK levels. | 500 nM | Blaskovich et al., 2003 [ | |
| Induced cytotoxicity in glioblastoma multiforme cells, | ┴ JAK/STAT pathway; | Not specified | Su et al., 2014 [ | ||
| Inhibitory activity in Sézary (Sz) syndrome and anaplastic large cell lymphoma | ┴ JAK/STAT pathway; | 30 μ | van Kester et al., 2008 [ | ||
| Cucurbitacin Q | Antiproliferative effect in human non-small-cell lung carcinoma (A549) cells | ↓ STAT3 but not JAK2 activation | 3.7 µM | Sun et al., 2005 [ | |
| Andrographolide | Enhanced anticancer activity of doxorubicin | ┴ STAT3 signaling pathway; | Not specified | Zhou et al., 2010 [ | |
| Betulinic acid | White-barked birch plants | Inhibited proliferation and induced apoptosis in human multiple myeloma (U266) cells; | ┴ STAT3 signaling, | Not specified | Pandey et al., 2010 |
| Anticancer effect in human hepatocellular carcinoma (HepG2, C3A, Hep3B, SNU-387, and PLC/PRF5) cells | ┴ Both constitutive and inducible activation of STAT3; | Not specified | Rajendran et al., 2011 [ | ||
| Cryptotanshinone | Induced cytotoxicity in human prostate cancer (DU145) cells | ┴ Phosphorylation of STAT3 through an independent mechanism of JAK2 phosphorylation | 7.59 µM | Shin et al., 2009 [ | |
| Nimbolide | Induced cytotoxicity and cell cycle arrest at G1–S stage in glioblastoma multiforme cells. It downregulates Bcl2 | ┴ STAT3 pathway, | Not specified | Karkare et al., 2014 [ | |
| Celastrol | Induced cytotoxicity in human multiple myeloma (U266, RPMI 8226 and RPMI-8226-LR-5) cells | ┴ Phosphorylation of STAT3 as well as STAT3-mediated IL-17 expression | Not specified | Kannaiyan et al., 2011 [ | |
| Inhibited differentiation and cell proliferation in multiple myeloma cells | ┴ STAT3 phosphorylation; | Not specified | Banerjee et al., 2019 [ | ||
| Ursolic acid | Induced cytotoxicity in human prostate cancer (DU145 and LNCaP) cells | ┴ Activation of constitutive and inducible STAT3; ↓ phosphorylation of Src and JAK2 | 80 and 47 µM | Shanmugam et al., 2011b [ | |
| Inhibited tumor growth in prostate xenograft tumor in TRAMPmice in vivo | ┴ JAK/STAT signaling; | Not specified | Shanmugam et al., 2011 [ | ||
| Brusatol | Induced cytotoxicity in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma | ┴ STAT3 signaling pathway; | Not specified | Lee et al., 2019 [ | |
| Oridonin | Inhibited proliferation and induced apoptosis and cell cycle arrest at G2/M phase in breast (MCF-7), leukemia (K562), lung (A549), prostate (PC-3), liver (Bel7402), gastric (BGC823), and uterine cervix cancer (HeLa) cells | ┴ STAT3 signaling pathway; | 18.4, 4.3, 18.6, 15.2, 7.6, 13.7 μg/mL | Bu et al., 2012 [ | |
| Thymoquinone | Induced cytotoxicity in multiple myeloma (U266 and RPMI 8226) cells. | ┴ STAT3 phosphorylation | 15 and 15 µM | Zhu et al., 2016 [ | |
| Parthenolide | ┴ Proliferation, ↑ apoptosis, cell cycle arrest at G2/M phase in breast (MCF-7), skin (MDMB-231), melanoma (LCC9), malignant glioma (ABCB5+), epidermal tumorigenesis (A375), liver (1205Lu), gastric cancer (WM793) cells | ┴ IL-6-induced STAT3 phosphorylation; ┴ JAK2 kinase activity | 9.54, 10 µM, 600 nM, 12, 2.9, 6, 12 µM | Cheng et al., 2011 [ | |
| Inhibited JAK2 kinase activity in MDA-MB-231 cells | ┴ IL-6-induced STAT3 phosphorylation | Not specified | Liu et al., 2018 [ | ||
| Dihydroartemisinin | Inhibited tumor cell growth in human head and neck cancer (FaDu), liver cancer (Hep-G2), colon cancer (HCT-116), and tongue cancer (Cal-27) cells | ┴ JAK2/STAT3 signaling activation; ↓ targeted proteins | 160, 80, 25, 80 µM | Jia et al., 2016 [ | |
| Alantolactone | Antiproliferative effect in glioblastoma (U87), colon (HCT-8), leukemia (HL-60), liver (HepG2), lung cancer (A549) cells | ┴ Both constitutive and inducible STAT3 activation at tyrosine 705; | 135.27 µM, 5 µg/mL, 1.1, 40, 8.39 µM | Pal et al., 2010 [ | |
| Inhibited proliferation in multiple myeloma, prostate, and breast cancer cell lines | ┴ STAT3 pathway; | Not specified | Kim et al., 2014 [ |
Various symbols (↑, ↓ and ┴) indicate increase, decrease and inhibition in the obtained variables, respectively.
Figure 4Structures of alkaloids, saponins, and steroids involved in anticancer activities related to inhibition of the JAK/STAT pathway.
Anticancer activities of alkaloids, saponins, steroids, lignan, and phytoalexin related to inhibition of the JAK/STAT signaling pathway.
| Phytochemical Class | Phytochemical Name | Sources | Anticancer Effect | Mechanism of Action | EC50/IC50 | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alkaloids | Capsaicin | Induction of cytotoxicity in human multiple myeloma (U266 and MM.1S) cells | ┴ Constitutive and IL-6-induced activation of STAT3; ┴ JAK1 and c-Src activation | 50 and 50 µM | Bhutani et al., 2007 [ | |
| Evodiamine | Inhibited proliferation, and induced apoptosis; | ↓ Constitutive and IL-6-induced activation of STAT3 tyrosine 705 (Tyr705); | 113, 8.516, 5, 10, 27.15 µM | Yang et al., 2013 [ | ||
| Indirubin | Reduced cell viability in human prostate and breast cancer cells; induced apoptosis; | ┴ STAT3 signaling; | ~4 µM for each cell line | Chen et al., 2018 [ | ||
| Saponins | β-Escin | Induction of cytotoxicity in human hepatocellular carcinoma (HepG2, PLC/PRF5, and HUH-7) cells | ┴ Activation of STAT3 and induced expression of SHP-1; | Not specified | Tan et al., 2010 [ | |
| Steroid | Diosgenin | Induced cytotoxicity in human hepatocellular carcinoma (C3A, HUH-7, and HepG2) cells | ┴ Constitutive and inducible activation of STAT3 | 100, 100 and 50 µM | Li et al., 2010 [ | |
| Ergosterol peroxide |
| Induced cytotoxicity in human multiple myeloma (U266) cells | ┴ Phosphorylation of JAK2; ┴ phosphorylation; | Not specified | Rhee et al., 2012 [ | |
| Guggulsterone | Induced cytotoxicity in human multiple myeloma (U266) cells | ┴ Constitutive andIL-6-induced STAT3; | 25 µM | Ahn et al., 2008 [ | ||
| Lignan | Arctiin | Inhibited proliferation, | ┴ STAT3 phosphorylation in tyrosine 705; | Not specified | Lee et al., 2019b [ | |
| Phytoalexin | Brassinin | Induced apoptosis in lung cancer cells (A549) in an in vivo mouse model | ┴ STAT3 activation; | Not specified | Lee et al., 2015 [ |
Various symbols (↑, ↓ and ┴) indicate increase, decrease and inhibition in the obtained variables, respectively.
Figure 5Illustration of various phytochemicals blocking specific steps in the JAK/STAT signaling pathway in relation to their cancer preventive and anticancer actions.