| Literature DB >> 35892934 |
Salman Ahmed1, Waqas Alam2, Philippe Jeandet3, Michael Aschner4, Khalaf F Alsharif5, Luciano Saso6, Haroon Khan2.
Abstract
Prostate cancer (PCa) is the leading cause of cancer death in men, and its treatment is commonly associated with severe adverse effects. Thus, new treatment modalities are required. In this context, natural compounds have been widely explored for their anti-PCa properties. Aquatic organisms contain numerous potential medications. Anticancer peptides are less toxic to normal cells and provide an efficacious treatment approach via multiple mechanisms, including altered cell viability, apoptosis, cell migration/invasion, suppression of angiogenesis and microtubule balance disturbances. This review sheds light on marine peptides as efficacious and safe therapeutic agents for PCa.Entities:
Keywords: antiangiogenic; antimetastatic; antimitotic; apoptosis; cell cycle arrest; marine peptides
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35892934 PMCID: PMC9330892 DOI: 10.3390/md20080466
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 6.085
Figure 1Pathophysiology of prostate cancer via NF-κB canonical and non-canonical pathways. The leading dimers of NF-κB are P50-P65, which activate the transcription process in canonical pathways. Different subunits like Toll-like receptor (TLR); tumor necrosis factor receptor (TNF-R); Inhibitor of NF-κB (IκB); IκB kinase; NF-κB-inducing kinase (NIK); mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAP); androgen receptor (AR); bone marrow-derived cell (BMDC) and major histocompatibility complex (MHC) are also involved in the pathology of prostate cancer.
Figure 2Summary of anticancer marine peptides isolated from different marine sources.
Summary of the sources, active peptides and anticancer mechanisms of action of Marine peptides.
| Peptides | Marine Sources | Active Derivative | Anticancer Mechanisms | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aurilide B | Cyanobacteria ( | Cyclic depsipeptide | Microtubule stabilization | [ |
| Lagunamide C | ↓ cell viability | [ | ||
| Cryptophycin-52 | Cyanobacteria ( | DNA fragmentation; Bcl2 ↓; Bax ↑; Bcl-xL ↓; caspase 3, 7 ↑; PARP ↑; p53 ↑; G2/M phase arrest; Microtubule depolymerization | [ | |
| Coibamide A | Cyanobacteria ( | ↓ cell viability | [ | |
| Laxaphycin B | Cyanobacteria ( | Cyclic dodecapeptide | [ | |
| Cyanobacteria ( | Peptide | Caspases 3, 9 ↑; cyt c release ↑; DNA fragmentation | [ | |
| Bisebromoamide | Cyanobacteria ( | ↓ cancer cell growth | [ | |
| Jaspamide | Sponge | Cyclic depsipeptide | Actin filament disruption | [ |
| [ | ||||
| Homophymines A–E | Sponge ( | ↓ cell viability | [ | |
| Neamphamides B–D | Sponge | [ | ||
| Geodiamolides D–F | Sponge ( | [ | ||
| Milnamides A–G | ||||
| Rolloamide A | Sponge | Cyclic heptapeptide | [ | |
| HTI-286 | Sponge ( | Tripeptide | Microtubule depolymerization | [ |
| [ | ||||
| Kahalalide F | Mollusk | Cyclic depsipeptide | PI3K-AKT inhibition; ErbB3 depletion | [ |
| ↓ cancer cell growth | [ | |||
| Elisidepsin | PI3K-AKT inhibition; ErbB3 depletion | [ | ||
| Dolastatin 10 | Mollusk | Pentapeptide | Microtubule depolymerization | [ |
| MCH | Mollusk | Peptide | Bcl2 ↓; Bax ↑; caspase 3, 9 ↑ | [ |
| KLH | Mollusk ( | ↓ cancer cell growth | [ | |
| Tamandarin A | Ascidia | Cyclic depsipeptide | ↓ cell viability | [ |
| Tamandarin B | [ | |||
| Patellamide B | Ascidia | Cyclic octapeptide | [ | |
| Patellamide F | ||||
| Ulithiacyclamide | Cyclic peptide | |||
| Trunkamide A | Ascidia | Cyclic heptapeptide | [ | |
| Diazonamide A | Ascidia | Macrocyclic peptide | Microtubule depolymerization | [ |
| Chromopeptide A | Bacteria ( | Depsipeptide | caspase 3 ↑; PARP cleavage; HDAC inhibition; G2/M phase arrest; p53 ↑ | [ |
| Sansalvamide A | Fungus ( | Cyclic depsipeptide | ↓ cell viability | [ |
| Microsporin A | Fungus ( | Cyclic tetrapeptide | [ | |
| Zygosporamide | Fungus | Cyclic pentadepsipeptide | ↓ cancer cell growth | [ |
| SHP | Fish | Tripeptide | Bcl2 ↓; Bax ↑; caspase 3 ↑; p53 ↑ | [ |
| SIO | Bcl2 ↓; Bax ↑; caspase 3 ↑; p53 ↑; | [ | ||
| S and G2/M phase cell cycle arrest | [ | |||
| TFD | Fish ( | Peptide | [ | |
| YALPAH | Fish | ↓ cancer cell growth | [ | |
| YALRAH | ||||
| YALPAR | ||||
| YALPAG | ||||
| ILYMP | Clam | Pentapeptide | Bcl2 ↓; Bax ↑; caspase 3, 9 ↑; | [ |
| SCH-P9 and SCH-P10 | Clam | Tetrapeptide | [ | |
| AAP-H | Sea anemone ( | Oligopeptide | [ | |
| Tachyplesin | Horseshoe crab |
| caspase 3, 6, 7, 8, 9 ↑; cyt c release ↑ | [ |
Figure 3Schematic representation of intracellular apoptosis pathway.
Figure 4Summary of the schematic representation of the anticancer mechanisms of marine peptides at different cellular pathways. Marine peptides inhibit different pathways such as inhibition of cell cycle, Amps, caspase, Ca+2 influx, DNA replication, protein synthesis and lysosomal pathways.
Marine peptides as anticancer agents in clinical trials.
| Cell lines/ (Peptides) | Phase | Clinical Trials.Gov Identifier | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| DU145 | Phase I | NCT00072228 | [ |
| Dolastatin 10 | Phase II | NCT00003626 | [ |
| Tasidotin/synthadotin (ILX651) | Phase II | NCT00082134 | [ |
| Dehydrodidemnine B | Phase III | NCT00780975 | [ |
| Kahalalide F | Phase I | NCT00106418 | [ |
| Elisidepsin (Irvalec®) | Phase II | NCT00884845 | [ |
Marine peptides as anticancer agents in pre-clinical trials.
| In Vitro | In Vivo | References | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human Prostate Cancer Cell Lines | IC50 | Experimental Model | Dose | |
| DU145 and PC-3 Aurilide B | <10 nM | ----- | ----- | [ |
| PC-3 Lagunamide C | 2.6 nM | ----- | ----- | [ |
| DU145 and LNCaP Cryptophycin-52 | 1–10 pM | ----- | ----- | [ |
| DU145 and PC-3 Coibamide A | 300 ng mL−1 | ----- | ----- | [ |
| PC-3 Laxaphycin B | 0.58 µM | ----- | ----- | [ |
| LNCaP | 500 µg mL−1 | ----- | ----- | [ |
| DU145 and PC-3 Bisebromoamide | GI50:40 nM | ----- | ----- | [ |
| DU145 Jaspamide | 0.8 µM | DU-145 xenograft | 10 mg/kg s.c. | [ |
| LNCaP Jaspamide | 0.07 µM | ----- | ----- | |
| PC-3 Jaspamide | 0.3 µM | ----- | ----- | |
| TSU-Pr1 Jaspamide | 170 nM | ----- | ----- | [ |
| PC-3 Homophymines A–E | A:4.2, B:6.2, C:3.0, D:6.3, E:3.9 nM | ----- | ----- | [ |
| LNCaP Neamphamides B-D | B:230, C:190, D:110 nM | ----- | ----- | [ |
| PC-3 Geodiamolides D-F | B: 170, C:110, D:130 nM | ----- | ----- | |
| D:33.1, E:118, F:155 nM | ----- | ----- | [ | |
| DU145 Rolloamide A | 0.85 µM | ----- | ----- | [ |
| LNCaP Rolloamide A | 0.8 µM | ----- | ----- | |
| PC-3 Rolloamide A | 1.4 µM | ----- | ----- | |
| PC3MM2 Rolloamide A | 4.7 µM | ----- | ----- | |
| LNCaP, C4-2, PC-3, PC-3dR | 0.65–4.6 nM | PC-3 and PC-3dR xenografts | 1.5 mg/kg i.v. | [ |
| ----- | ----- | PC3-MM2 xenograft | 1.0 mg/kg i.v. | [ |
| PC-3 Kahalalide F | 0.07 µM | ----- | ----- | [ |
| DU145 and LNCaP | 0.28 µM | ----- | ----- | |
| ----- | ----- | PC-3 and DU145 xenografts | 123 μg/kg i.v. | [ |
| PC-3 Elisidepsin | 1.80 µM | ----- | ----- | [ |
| DU145 | 1.26 µM | ----- | ----- | |
| DU145 Dolastatin 10 | 0.5 nM | DU145 xenograft | 5 µg q4d i.p. | [ |
| PC-3 MCH | LC50:0.94 mg mL−1 | ----- | ----- | [ |
| DU145 Tamandarin A | GI50:12.5 μg | ----- | ----- | [ |
| 1.36 ng mL−1 | ----- | ----- | [ | |
| PC-3 Tamandarin B | 1.4 µM | ----- | ----- | [ |
| DU145 and PC-3 | LC50: 48 µM | ----- | ----- | [ |
| LC50: 13 µM | ----- | ----- | ||
| LC50: 3 µM | ----- | ----- | ||
| DU145 | 7.08 nM | ----- | ----- | [ |
| PC-3 | 2.3 nM | ----- | ----- | [ |
| 2.43 nmol L−1 | PC-3 xenograft | 1.6 mg/kg i.v. | [ | |
| DU145 | 2.08 nmol L−1 | ----- | ----- | |
| LNCaP | 1.75 nmol L−1 | ----- | ----- | |
| PC-3 | 27.4 μg mL−1 | ----- | ----- | [ |
| DU145 and PC-3 | 2.7 µM | ----- | ----- | [ |
| GI50:9.1 µM | ----- | ----- | [ | |
| PC-3 | 15 mg mL−1 | ----- | ----- | [ |
| DU145 | 1 mg mL−1 | ----- | ----- | [ |
| DU145 and PC-3 | 15 mg mL−1 | ----- | ----- | [ |
| PC-3 | 3.5 nM | ----- | ----- | [ |
| GI50:16.9 μM | ----- | ----- | [ | |
| GI50:11.1 μM | ----- | ----- | ||
| GI50:19.0 μM | ----- | ----- | ||
| GI50:71.2 μM | ----- | ----- | ||
| DU145, ILYMP, SCH-P9 and SCH-P10 | 11.25 mM | ----- | ----- | [ |
| SCH-P9:1.21, SCH-P10: 1.41 mg mL−1 | ----- | ----- | [ | |
| PC-3 | SCH-P9:1.09, SCH-P10: 0.91 mg mL−1 | ----- | ----- | |
| DU145, AAP-H | 2.298 mM | ----- | ----- | [ |
| TSU, Tachyplesin | 75 μg mL−1 | ----- | ----- | [ |