| Literature DB >> 35324675 |
Jia-Qi Lu1, Kam-Bo Wong1, Pang-Chui Shaw1,2.
Abstract
Tian Hua Fen, a herbal powder extract that contains trichosanthin (TCS), was used as an abortifacient in traditional Chinese medicine. In 1972, TCS was purified to alleviate the side effects. Because of its clinical applications, TCS became one of the most active research areas in the 1960s to the 1980s in China. These include obtaining the sequence information in the 1980s and the crystal structure in 1995. The replication block of TCS on human immunodeficiency virus in lymphocytes and macrophages was found in 1989 and started a new chapter of its development. Clinical studies were subsequently conducted. TCS was also found to have the potential for gastric and colorectal cancer treatment. Studies on its mechanism showed TCS acts as an rRNA N-glycosylase (EC 3.2.2.22) by hydrolyzing and depurinating A-4324 in α-sarcin/ricin loop on 28S rRNA of rat ribosome. Its interaction with acidic ribosomal stalk proteins was revealed in 2007, and its trafficking in mammalian cells was elucidated in the 2000s. The adverse drug reactions, such as inducing immune responses, short plasma half-life, and non-specificity, somehow became the obstacles to its usage. Immunotoxins, sequence modification, or coupling with polyethylene glycerol and dextran were developed to improve the pharmacological properties. TCS has nicely shown the scientific basis of traditional Chinese medicine and how its research and development have expanded the knowledge and applications of ribosome-inactivating proteins.Entities:
Keywords: Tian Hua Fen; abortifacient; anti-HIV; anti-cancer; immunotoxin; rRNA N-glycosylase; trichosanthin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35324675 PMCID: PMC8950148 DOI: 10.3390/toxins14030178
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Figure 1The sources of commercial Tian Hua Fen in China in the 1980s [3,7]. Researchers used the microscopic identification method to identify and authenticate commercial Tian Hua Fen in 21 provinces in China in the 1980s. The corresponding species names of their origins are shown on the map.
Figure 2Extraction and purification steps of crystalized/purified TCS powder. (A) Three reported extraction and purification steps of TCS from Trichosanthes kirilowii are listed. Recrystallization [12], FFE (free-flow electrophoresis) [13] and TPP (three-phase partitioning) [14] processes were used. TCS: trichosanthin. (B) 15% SDS-PAGE gel photo of purified TCS in our lab.
Clinical studies using Trichosanthin (TCS).
| Time | Country/City | Agent | Target Disease | Effect | ADR 1 | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1989 2 | CA, US 3 | GLQ223 4 | AIDS | - | - | [ |
| 1990 | CA, US | GLQ223 | AIDS | No consistent or | No significant toxicity, except one with a severe neurological ADR. | [ |
| 1990 | Nottingham, UK; CA, US; FL, US 6 | GLQ223 | AIDS | Serum p24 antigen decreased after one month in 10–18 patients; one converted to negative. | Severe fatigue and myalgias; dementia or even coma in two patients; one death | [ |
| 1990 | Shanghai, China | TCS7 | Abortion | High success rate, better in cervical injections | Increased body temperature; pain at the injection site; alleviated by dexamethasone | [ |
| 1991 | CA, US; Pavia, | GLQ223 | AIDS | Pharmacokinetic study; predictability of elimination and distribution among species | - | [ |
| 1991 | Shanghai, China | TCS with dexamethasone | Midterm abortion and anti-early pregnancy | High success rate | Flu-like syndrome; can be alleviated with dexamethasone | [ |
| 1992 | Shanghai, China | TCS | AIDS | Reduced p24 antigen, increased CD4 cells | Flu-like syndrome; pain and erythema at the injection sites | [ |
| 1993 | Nottingham, UK; CA, US; MD, US 8 | GLQ223 | AIDS | - | Two patients developed coma; multifocal neurological deficits after treatment. | [ |
| 1993 | CA, US; WA, US 9 | GLQ223 | AIDS | For patients who received 36 and 50 μg/kg, an increase in CD4+ and CD8+ T cells was sustained; Beta-Microglobulin levels increased during the infusion. | Flu-like syndrome with muscle; joint aches; increase in creatinine kinase levels | [ |
| 1994 | Shanghai, China | TCS with dexamethasone | Abortion | High success rate (100%) | Flu-like syndrome; alleviated with dexamethasone | [ |
| 1994 | Shanghai, China | TCS | Abortion | - | TCS may have a transient effect on the myocardium | [ |
| 1994 | Nottingham, UK | GLQ223 combined with zidovudine | AIDS | Significant increase in CD4+ cell levels | Myalgias, fevers, mild elevation in liver function tests; mild-moderate anaphylactic reactions; two with mental status changes | [ |
| 2000 | Shanghai, China | TCS | Tubal pregnancy | 92% success rate | Flu-like syndrome | [ |
| 2001 | Shanghai, China | TCS | Midterm abortion | High success rate (98%) | Flu-like syndrome | [ |
1 ADR: adverse drug reactions. 2 1989: a clinical trial in 1989 was halted in August by FDA, and then resumed with full FDA approval with a new design to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of GLQ223 over a longer term in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Miami, and Florida. 3 CA, US: California, USA. 4 GLQ223: also called Compound Q, a highly purified, formulated form of TCS. 5 Serum concentration of GLQ223 was around effective concentration in vitro but has not been maintained for a sufficient duration. 6 Fl, US: Florida, USA. 7 TCS: trichosanthin, purified protein from Trichosanthes kirilowii. 8 MD, US: Maryland, USA. 9 WA, US: Washington, DC, USA.
Figure 3The DNA and protein sequences of TCS. The primary and nucleotide sequences of TCS (UniProt accession: Q6BBQ4; GenBank: M34858.1). The amino acids in the active centre are marked in bold. The signal peptide (−23–−1 aa) at N-termini and extra region (248–266 aa) at C-termini are underlined.
Figure 4Structure basis of TCS as an rRNA N-glycosylase (EC 3.2.2.22). The structure of TCS with P2 (PDB code: 2JDL) was combined with the structure of TCS and adenine (PDB code: 1MRJ). (A) The protein structure of TCS is shown in a light blue image. (B) The active centre of TCS (Y70, Y111, E160, R163, W192) is shown in violet sticks. The active centre of TCS is conserved in RIPs. Adenine molecule is shown as bright orange sticks. Dash lines indicate hydrogen bonds between adenine molecule and TCS, and related distances (Å) are marked. The two tyrosine residues are stacking with adenine. (C) Interaction of TCS and C11-P2. C11-P2 (DDDMGFGLFD) is shown in light orange. C11-P2 interacts with the C-termini of TCS. Hydrogen bonds between C11-P2 peptide and TCS are shown in dash lines, and related distances (Å) are marked. RIPs: Ribosome-inactivating protein; TCS: trichosanthin; C11-P2: 11 amino acids of P2 protein in the C-termini (only ten amino acids are shown in the figure).
Immunotoxins (ITs) based on TCS.
| Time | Immunotoxin | Target Antigen | Disease | Effect | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1991 | TCS-Hepama-1 | Hepatoma-associated antigen | Hepatoma | Potent and specific antihepatoma agents; might have considerable potential in hepatoma therapy. | [ |
| 1992 | B3-IgG-TCS | CEA 1-MAb antigen | Colorectal cancer; Cervical cancer | Anti-tumor activity in vitro and in vivo | [ |
| 1993 | TCS-Hepama-1-gold | Hepatoma-associated antigen and gold | Hepatoma | TCS-Hepama-1-gold particles are bound to the microvilli of human liver carcinoma cells and can be inhibited competitively by pretreatment with Hepama-1 for an hour. | [ |
| 1995 | CMU15—TCS | Lung cancer antigen | Lung cancer | Significant tumor-inhibited effect in vivo, inhibition rate of tumor growth reaching 76% in the group of peritoneal injection and 99.4% in the group of intra-tumor injection without apparent toxic effect to host mice | [ |
| 1996 | TCS-Ng76 | Melanoma antigen | Melanoma | The affinity gel may be used to purify different TCS-composed immunotoxins. | [ |
| 1997 | H-2 Ag-TCS | Mouse major histocompatibility complex antigens (H-2 Ag) | Rat cardiac xenografts | The proliferation of recipient immune cells pretreated with conjugate H-2Ag-TCS was inhibited. H-2 Ag-TCS significantly prolonged the cardiac survival time | [ |
| 1999 | p75-TCS (anti-p75 anti-mouse IgG-TCS) | Rat nerve growth factor (NGF) receptor (p75 receptor) (p75NTR) | Immuno-lesioning (cholinergic basal forebrain neurons) | Potent and caused a selective and specific depletion of cholinergic neurons in the neostriatum | [ |
| 2010 | EGF-TCS | EGFR 2 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Inhibits the growth of solid tumors in nude mice | [ |
| 2011 | EGF-TCSredlk | EGFR | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Anti-cancer activity in vivo and in vitro | [ |
1 CEA: carcinoembryonic antigen. 2 EGFR: Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor.