| Literature DB >> 33297504 |
Roberta Macrì1, Vincenzo Musolino1, Micaela Gliozzi1, Cristina Carresi1, Jessica Maiuolo1, Saverio Nucera1, Miriam Scicchitano1, Francesca Bosco1, Federica Scarano1, Stefano Ruga1, Maria Caterina Zito1, Lorenza Guarnieri1, Ezio Bombardelli2, Vincenzo Mollace1,2.
Abstract
The employment studies of natural extracts in the prevention and treatment of several diseases highlighted the role of different species of genus Ferula L., belonging to the Apiaceae family, dicotyledonous plants present in many temperate zones of our planet. Ferula communis L. is the main source of sesquiterpene ferutinin, a bioactive compound studied both in vitro and in vivo, because of different effects, such as phytoestrogenic, antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, but also antiproliferative and cytotoxic activity, performed in a dose-dependent and cell-dependent way. The present review will focus on the molecular mechanisms involved in the different activities of Ferutinin, starting from its antioxidant potential at low doses until its ionophoric property and the subsequent mitochondrial dysfunction induced through administration of high doses, which represent the key point of its anticancer action. Furthermore, we will summarize the data acquired from some experimental studies on different cell types and on several diseases. The results obtained showed an important antioxidant and phytoestrogenic regulation with lack of typical side effects related to estrogenic therapy. The preferential cell death induction for tumor cell lines suggests that ferutinin may have anti-neoplastic properties, and may be used as an antiproliferative and cytotoxic agent in an estrogen dependent and independent manner. Nevertheless, more data are needed to clearly understand the effect of ferutinin in animals before using it as a phytoestrogen or anticancer drug.Entities:
Keywords: Ferula L.; NO; ROS; antioxidant and anti-inflammatory potential; antiproliferative and cytotoxic activity; ferutinin; ionophoric property; mitochondrial dysfunction; phytoestrogenic activity
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Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33297504 PMCID: PMC7731292 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25235768
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1The pleiotropic activities of sesquiterpene ferutinin. Ferutinin exerts several activities in human diseases, having estrogenic, anti-cancer, anti-inflammatory and bactericidal properties.
Figure 2Regulation of Wnt/β catenin pathway by ferutinin: ferutinin induces osteogenic differentiation of dental pulp-derived stem cells and leads to the promotion of osteoblastogenesis.
Figure 3The ionophoric property of sesquiterpene ferutinin. Ferutinin, thanks to its ionophoric activity leads to loss of transmembrane potential and the subsequent apoptosis induction.
Figure 4Ferutinin-induced mitochondrial dysfunction: key role of ferutinin action on respiratory chain complex I and III.
IC50 values of different types of cell lines, tumor and healthy respectively, treated with ferutinin.
| Cells Treated | IC 50 | Ref |
|---|---|---|
| 81 μM | [ | |
| 67 μM | [ | |
| 81 μM | [ | |
| 72 μM | [ | |
| 25.3 μM | [ | |
| 29.1 μM | [ | |
| 39 μM | [ | |
| 58 μM | [ | |
| 16.7 μM | [ | |
| 98 μM | [ | |
| 136 μM | [ |