| Literature DB >> 35011516 |
Abdelhakim Bouyahya1, Aicha El Allam1, Ikrame Zeouk2, Douae Taha3, Gokhan Zengin4, Bey Hing Goh5,6, Michelina Catauro7, Domenico Montesano8, Nasreddine El Omari9.
Abstract
Grifolin is a volatile compound contained in essential oils of several medicinal plants. Several studies show that this substance has been the subject of numerous pharmacological investigations, which have yielded interesting results. Grifolin demonstrated beneficial effects for health via its multiple pharmacological activities. It has anti-microbial properties against bacteria, fungi, and parasites. In addition, grifolin exhibited remarkable anti-cancer effects on different human cancer cells. The anticancer action of this molecule is related to its ability to act at cellular and molecular levels on different checkpoints controlling the signaling pathways of human cancer cell lines. Grifolin can induce apoptosis, cell cycle arrest, autophagy, and senescence in these cells. Despite its major pharmacological properties, grifolin has only been investigated in vitro and in vivo. Therefore, further investigations concerning pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic tests are required for any possible pharmaceutical application of this substance. Moreover, toxicological tests and other investigations involving humans as a study model are required to validate the safety and clinical applications of grifolin.Entities:
Keywords: NF-κB; anticancer effect; apoptosis; grifolin; pharmacodynamic
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35011516 PMCID: PMC8746472 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27010284
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Chemical structure of grifolin designed by Chem-Draw.
Sources of grifolin.
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Figure 2Biological properties of grifolin.
Anticancer activity of Grifolin.
| Cancer Type | Cell Lines | Experimental Approaches | Mechanism of Action | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marmoset B lymphoblastoid | B95-8 | Flow cytometry | Apoptosis | [ |
| Burkitts lymphoma | Raji | Flow cytometry | Apoptosis | |
| Chronic myelogenous leukemia | K562 | Flow cytometry | Apoptosis | |
| Colon cancer | SW480 | Flow cytometry | Apoptosis | |
| Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | CNE1 | Flow cytometry | Apoptosis | |
| Breast cancer | MCF7 | Flow cytometry | Apoptosis | |
| Cervical cancer | HeLa | Flow cytometry | Apoptosis | |
| Murine macrophages | RAW 264.7 | LPS-induced production of nitric oxide (NO) | Inhibited NO production | [ |
| Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | CNE1 | Flow cytometry | Induced cell-cycle arrest in G1 phase via the ERK1/2 pathway | [ |
| Osteosarcoma | MG63 and U2OS | Flow cytometry | Apoptosis | [ |
| Lung cancer | A549 | Colorimetric sulforhodamine B method | Cytotoxic effect | [ |
| Human melanoma | SK-Mel-2 | Colorimetric sulforhodamine B method | Cytotoxic effect | |
| Mouse melanoma | B16F1 | Colorimetric sulforhodamine B method | Cytotoxic effect | |
| Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | CNE1 | Flow cytometry | Upregulated DAPK1 via p53 | [ |
| Cervical cancer | HeLa | In vitro kinase assay | Inhibited ERK1/2 kinase activities | [ |
| Breast cancer | MCF7 and MDA-MB-231 | In vitro kinase assay | Inhibited ERK1/2 kinase activities | |
| Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | 5-8F | In vitro kinase assay | Downregulated the level of DNMT1 mRNA | |
| Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | 5-8F | Metastatic mice (in vivo) | Reduced lung metastases to 18.2% | |
| Ovarian cancer | SKOV3 and A2780 | Flow cytometry | Apoptosis | [ |
| Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | 5-8F | Cell adhesion assay | Inhibited adhesion and migration of tumor cells | [ |
| Gastric carcinoma | MGC-803 | Cell adhesion assay | Inhibited adhesion and migration of tumor cells | |
| Gastric cancer | SGC-7901 and BGC-823 | Flow cytometry | Apoptosis | [ |
| Ovarian cancer | A2780 | Flow cytometry | Apoptosis | [ |
| Gastric cancer | SGC-7901 and BGC-823 | q-RT PCR assay | Apoptosis | [ |
| Gastric cancer | SGC-7901 and BGC-823 | Xenografted nude BALB/c mice with gastric cancer cells | Increased the survival rate | |
| Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | CNE1 and C666-1 | DNMT activity measurement | Inhibited the activity and expression of DNMT1 | [ |
| Pituitary adenoma | GH3 | Flow cytometry | Apoptosis | [ |
| Colon cancer | HT-29 | Cytotoxicity assay | Anti-cell viability effect | [ |
| Colon cancer | SW-480 | Cytotoxicity assay | Anti-cell viability effect | |
| Cervical cancer | HeLa | Cytotoxicity assay | Anti-cell viability effect |
Figure 3Anticancer mechanisms of grifolin. Grifolin can mediate its anticancer actions through three fundamental mechanisms. (1) Grifolin can induce an increase of Bax and a decrease of Bcl2 in Mitochondria which exhibit a release of cytochrome C and an eventual increase of caspase 3 cleave PAPR proteins, thus inducing intrinsic apoptotic action. (2) Grifolin can inhibit the ERK1/2 pathway and increase the expression of DNMT1, which plays a key role in maintaining of cell memory with inhibiting cell proliferation. (3) Grifolin can induce senescence of cancerous cells through cell cycle arrest (via inhibiting inhibition CDK4, cyclin E, and cyclin D1 regulator proteins) and a decrease of RB phosphorylation. Abbreviations: DNMT1, DNA Methyltransferase 1; ERK1/2, extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1 and 2; Bcl, B cell lymphoma; Bax, BCL2-associated X protein; RB, retinoblastoma protein; PARP, poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase; CDK, cyclin-dependent kinase.