| Literature DB >> 32698385 |
Berin Karaman Mayack1, Wolfgang Sippl2, Fidele Ntie-Kang2,3,4.
Abstract
Natural products have been used for the treatment of human diseases since ancient history. Over time, due to the lack of precise tools and techniques for the separation, purification, and structural elucidation of active constituents in natural resources there has been a decline in financial support and efforts in characterization of natural products. Advances in the design of chemical compounds and the understanding of their functions is of pharmacological importance for the biomedical field. However, natural products regained attention as sources of novel drug candidates upon recent developments and progress in technology. Natural compounds were shown to bear an inherent ability to bind to biomacromolecules and cover an unparalleled chemical space in comparison to most libraries used for high-throughput screening. Thus, natural products hold a great potential for the drug discovery of new scaffolds for therapeutic targets such as sirtuins. Sirtuins are Class III histone deacetylases that have been linked to many diseases such as Parkinson`s disease, Alzheimer's disease, type II diabetes, and cancer linked to aging. In this review, we examine the revitalization of interest in natural products for drug discovery and discuss natural product modulators of sirtuins that could serve as a starting point for the development of isoform selective and highly potent drug-like compounds, as well as the potential application of naturally occurring sirtuin inhibitors in human health and those in clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: drug discovery; epigenetics; natural products; sirtuin; structure–activity relationship
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32698385 PMCID: PMC7397027 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25143287
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Crystal structure of human sirtuins in complex with resveratrol and 4’-bromo-resveratrol. (A) The overall structure of sirtuin (Sirt)1/p53-7-amino-4-methylcoumarin (AMC)/resveratrol complex. N-terminal domain (NTD), catalytic domain (CD), and C terminal essential for Sirt1 activity (ESA) region are color-coded as in Figure 1A. (B) Overall structure of the Sirt5/FdL-1/resveratrol complex. (C) Overall structure of Sirt3/FdL-1/4′-bromo-resveratrol complex. (D) The overall structure of the hSirt3/ACS2/carba-NAD+ complex. The acetylated p53-AMC, FdL1-peptide and ACS2-peptide are shown in cyan sticks. Resveratrol and 4′-bromo-resveratrol molecules are represented as pink sticks. The zinc ion is shown as a deep blue sphere.
Figure 2Chemical structures of selected chromenone-derived natural products as sirtuin inhibitors.
Figure 32D structure of tanikolide dimer, chalcones, and bichalcones showing sirtuin inhibitory effects.
Figure 4(a) Two-dimensional scheme of the interaction between mulberrin and the 4ZZJ complex, generated by LigandScout 4.2. (b) The structure of mulberrin and 4ZZJ complex shown as a mesh surface image, generated by LigandScout (hydrophilic, blue; hydrophobic, grey). The interaction between (c) quinine, (d) quinidine, and (e) gartanin, with the 4ZZJ [125]. Figure reproduced by permission.
Potential health benefits of sirtuin inhibitors and modulators from nature.
| Compound (PCID *) | Health Benefits | Mode of Action | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fisetin | Antiaging and against cardiovascular disease | -Demonstrates senotherapeutic activity in mice and in human tissues. | [ |
| Anticarcinogenic agent, chemopreventive/ | -Activates caspases-7 and -9. | [ | |
| Antioxidant agent | Not well known | [ | |
| Antidiabetic | Lowers methylglyoxal dependent protein glycation | [ | |
| Orientin (5281675) | Anti-inflammatory | -Decreases the activity of myeloperoxidase (MPO) and the production of cytokines in rats. | [ |
| Antioxidant and Antiaging | Reduces the H2O2-induced β-galactosidase activity | [ | |
| Antiviral and antibacterial agent | -Shows moderate or potent antiviral activity against Para 3 virus. | [ | |
| Anti-inflammatory agent | -Inhibits the high mobility group box-1 (HMGB1) protein level in lipopolysaccharide- (LPS-) induced umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) as well as the HMGB1-mediated cytoskeletal rearrangements. | [ | |
| Anticancer effects | -Regulates the apoptosis-related gene expression of p53 and bcl-2. | [ | |
| Weight loss | -Represses the accumulation of intracellular triglyceride (TG) in mouse adipocyte 3T3-L1 cells. | [ | |
| Protection against bone marrow damage | Reduces chromosomal aberration cells in bone marrow | [ | |
| Other (e.g., vasodilatation, cardioprotective, radioprotective, neuroprotective, antidepressant-like, antiadipogenesis, antinociceptive, etc., effects) | -Inhibits the protein expressions of C/EBPα and PPARγ | [ | |
| Piceatannol (667639) | Anticancer effects | -Inhibits migration and invasion of prostate cancer cells, possibly mediated by decreased interleukin-6 signaling. | [ |
| Metabolic diseases | -Inhibits adipogenesis. | [ | |
| Cardiovascular diseases | -Activates a nuclear receptor, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPAR-α) isoform, on rat hepatoma (H4IIEC3 cells) in vitro. | [ | |
| Quercetin (5280343) | Cancer treatment | Tyrosine kinase inhibition in vivo | [ |
| Treatment of colitis and gastric ulcer | Not well known | [ | |
| Treatment of respiratory tract infection | Not well known | [ | |
| Treatment of type 2 diabetes | Was shown to be beneficial in improving the antioxidant status of patients with type 2 diabetes while having no other significant effect on glycemic control and lipid profile | [ | |
| Treatment of high blood pressure | -Mode of action still under investigation | [ | |
| Treatment of oral lichen planus | -Restriction of cyto-kines including IL12, INFγ, INF α, IL8, cyclooxi-genase 2 and prostaglandin E | [ | |
| Other health benefits | Not well known | [ | |
| Resveratrol (445154) | Obesity treatment | Sirtuin modulation | [ |
| Colon cancer prevention | Inhibits a key signaling pathway involved in colon cancer initiation, the Wnt pathway, in vitro. | [ | |
| Cardioprotection | Decreases low-density lipoprotein (LDL) oxidation, and functions as a direct free radical scavenger. | [ | |
| Anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, platelet antiaggregatory and anticarcinogenic properties | Monoamine oxidase activity | [ | |
| Prevention of rotaviral diarrhea | Inhibition of the intestinal calcium-activated chloride channel | [ | |
| Potential for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease. | Induces the disaggregation of amyloid β (Aβ) peptide | [ | |
| Potential for the treatment of diabetes. | Inhibition of high glucose-induced apoptosis by maintaining Ca2+ and preserving mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP) levels. | [ | |
| Vitexin (5280441) | Anticancer effects | -Regulates the apoptosis-related gene expression of p53 and bcl-2 | [ |
| Anti-oxidant effects | Subdues oxygen free radical and protecting the antioxidant enzyme activity in cells and the sulfhydryl in the red cell membrane protein. | [ | |
| Lifespan extending and stress resistant properties | Reduces intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation in a dose-dependent manner | [ | |
| Anti-inflammatory effects | -Inhibit IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, IL-17, and IL-33 | [ | |
| Anti-neoplastic effects | -Promotes autophagy through the up-regulation of Hsp90 expression and subsequent activation of endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-stress | [ | |
| Protective effects against neurological and psychiatric diseases (e.g., hypoxia and ischemia injury, Alzheimer’s disease, learning, cognition and depression, Anti-nociceptive activity, Other neurological and psychiatric disorders, etc.) | -Helps to maintain blood-brain barrier (BBB) integrity and attenuate brain oedema with down-regulated HIF1-α and VEGF | [ | |
| Protective activity in cardiovascular system | -Inhibits the isoproterenol-induced increase in resting intracellular free calcium as well as expression of the calcium downstream effectors calcineurin- NFATc3 and phosphorylated calmodulin kinase II (CaMKII) both in vitro and in vivo | [ | |
| Protective effects against endocrine and metabolic disease (e.g., diabetes, obesity, other endocrine and metabolic diseases, anti-thyroid effect, etc.) | -Reduces postprandial blood glucose both in sucrose loaded normoglycemic mice and sucrose induced diabetic rats | [ | |
| Anti-microbial and anti-viral effects | -Activity against anti- | [ |
* PubChem compound ID [224].