| Literature DB >> 35164406 |
Ana Paço1,2, Teresa Brás1,2, Jacqueline O Santos1,2, Paula Sampaio3, Andreia C Gomes3, Maria F Duarte1,2.
Abstract
Sesquiterpene lactones (SL), characterized by their high prevalence in the Asteraceae family, are one of the major groups of secondary metabolites found in plants. Researchers from distinct research fields, including pharmacology, medicine, and agriculture, are interested in their biological potential. With new SL discovered in the last years, new biological activities have been tested, different action mechanisms (synergistic and/or antagonistic effects), as well as molecular structure-activity relationships described. The review identifies the main sesquiterpene lactones with interconnections between immune responses and anti-inflammatory actions, within different cellular models as well in in vivo studies. Bioaccessibility and bioavailability, as well as molecular structure-activity relationships are addressed. Additionally, plant metabolic engineering, and the impact of sesquiterpene lactone extraction methodologies are presented, with the perspective of biological activity enhancement. Sesquiterpene lactones derivatives are also addressed. This review summarizes the current knowledge regarding the therapeutic potential of sesquiterpene lactones within immune and inflammatory activities, highlighting trends and opportunities for their pharmaceutical/clinical use.Entities:
Keywords: JAK-STAT; MAPK; NF-κB; anti-inflammatory action; immune response; sesquiterpene lactones; structure–activity relationship
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35164406 PMCID: PMC8839508 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27031142
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Structures of the main sesquiterpene lactone-type skeletons: germacranolide isomers (i-a,i-b); elemanolide (ii); eudesmanolide isomers (iii-a,iii-b); eremophilanolide (iv); guaianolide isomers (v-a,v-b); pseudoguaianolide isomers (vi-a,vi-b); and hypocretenolide (vii).
Figure 2Cynaropicrin chemical structure, with the reactive center, α-methylene-γ-lactone moiety (αM γL). The reactive centers of SL are evidentiated with red circles. (A) Michael reaction between α-methylene-γ-lactone moiety (αM γL). (B) Reaction with a sulfhydryl group.
SL described as having regulatory functions upon the immune system, highlighting immunoregulatory actions within acquired and innate responses.
| Sesquiterpene Lactone | Action | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Acquired Immune Response | ||
| Reduction of T cells production | ||
| Arglabin | ↓ TCR | [ |
| Artemether (an artemisinin derivative) | ↓ IL-2, interferon-γ (IFN- γ), TCR | [ |
| 7-hydroxyfrullanoide | ↓ IL-2, ↑↑ Ca2+ ⇒ ↓ CD4+
| [ |
| Cynaropicrin | ↓ proliferation of CD4+ and CD8+ T- and B- lymphocytes | [ |
| Deoxyelephantopin | ↓ lymphocytes | [ |
|
| ||
|
| ||
| Tagitinin C, F and A | ↑ neutrophils apoptosis, ↓ IL-6, ↓ IL-8, ↓ TNF-α | [ |
|
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| Diacethylpiptocarphol | ↓ neutrophil infiltration | [ |
| Lychnopholide | ↓ neutrophil infiltration, ↓ TNF-α | [ |
| Budlein A | ↓ Neutrophil recruitment, ↓ Il-1β and TNF-α mRNA | [ |
| Alantolactone | ↓ TNF-α, ↓ IL-6 and ↓IL-17A, | [ |
| Costunolide | ↓ Neutrophil recruitment, | [ |
|
| ||
| Alantolactone | ↓ Th2 cytokines (IL-4 and IL-3) | [ |
| Damsin | Eosinophils | [ |
Figure 3Overview of the three major signaling pathways regulating inflammation: NF-kB, MAPK, and JAK-STAT. Few sesquiterpene lactones are presented as examples to demonstrate their inhibitory action within the different molecular mechanisms.
SL described as having roles in inflammatory signaling mechanisms, namely NF-kB, MAPK, and JAK-STAT.
| Inflammatory Signaling Mechanism | SL | Downstream Effect | References |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Parthenolide | ↓ RelA phosphorylation, ↓ NF-kB DNA binding | [ |
| Artemisinin | ↑ IkBα, ↓ NF-kB translocation, ↓ iNOS | [ | |
| Santamarin | ↓ NF-kB, ↑ HO-1, ↓ NO, PGE2, TNF-α, IL-1β | [ | |
| Dehydrocostus lactone | ↓ NF-kB, ↓ IFR3, ↓ COX-2, ↓ IIP-10 | [ | |
| Lactucopicrin | ↓ importin-α3 ↓ NF-kB | [ | |
|
| Alantolactone | ↓IKK, ↑ IkBα, ↓ NF-kB, ↓ AP-1 (MAPK), ↓ iNOS, ↓ COX-2 | [ |
| Ginkgolides | ↓ PAF-induced platelet aggregation | [ | |
|
| Parthenolide | ↓ ERK1/2 phosphorylation | [ |
| Achillolide A | ↓ SAPK/JNK and p44/p42 MAPK phosphorylation | [ | |
| 2α-hydroxyl-3β-angeloylcinnamolide | ↓ ERK1/2, ↓p38 and ↓JNKs phosphorylation | [ | |
|
| Damsin | ↓ ERK1/2, ↓ STAT3, ↓ TNF-α, ↓ IL-6 and ↓ IL-12 | [ |
|
| Parthenolide | ↓ STAT phosphorylation (S-glutathionylation of Cys residues) | [ |
| 6-Oangeloylplenolin | ↓ STAT3 activation (block STAT3-SH2 function domain), ↓ IL-6 | [ |
Figure 4Sesquiterpene chemical structures: (A) parthenolide, (B) artemisinin, and (C) thapsigargin.
Sesquiterpene lactones and their derivatives with clinical relevance.
| Sesquiterpene | Clinical Study | References/ |
|---|---|---|
| Dimethyl-amino-parthenolide (LC-1) | Phase I clinical trials | [ |
| Artesunate (DB09274) | Advanced breast cancer | NCT00764036 [ |
| 2’-aminoarteether ( | Licensed drug | [ |
| Mipsagargin (G-202) | Licensed drug | NCT01056029 [ |