| Literature DB >> 35910383 |
Chang-Lin Wang1,2, Ming-Zhou Gao2,3, Dong-Mei Gao1,2, Ying-Hui Guo1,2, Zhan Gao1,2, Xiang-Ju Gao1,2, Jie-Qiong Wang2,4, Ming-Qi Qiao1,2.
Abstract
Tubeimoside-1 (TBMS-1), a natural triterpenoid saponin found in traditional Chinese herbal medicine Bolbostemmatis Rhizoma, is present in numerous Chinese medicine preparations. This review aims to comprehensively describe the pharmacology, pharmacokinetics, toxicity and targeting preparations of TBMS-1, as well the therapeutic potential for cancer treatement. Information concerning TBMS-1 was systematically collected from the authoritative internet database of PubMed, Web of Science, and China National Knowledge Infrastructure applying a combination of keywords involving "tumor," "pharmacokinetics," "toxicology," and targeting preparations. New evidence shows that TBMS-1 possesses a remarkable inhibitory effect on the tumors of the respiratory system, digestive system, nervous system, genital system as well as other systems in vivo and in vitro. Pharmacokinetic studies reveal that TBMS-1 is extensively distributed in various tissues and prone to degradation by the gastrointestinal tract after oral administration, causing a decrease in bioavailability. Meanwhile, several lines of evidence have shown that TBMS-1 may cause adverse and toxic effects at high doses. The development of liver-targeting and lung-targeting preparations can reduce the toxic effect of TBMS-1 and increase its efficacy. In summary, TBMS-1 can effectively control tumor treatment. However, additional research is necessary to investigate in vivo antitumor effects and the pharmacokinetics of TBMS-1. In addition, to reduce the toxicity of TBMS-1, future research should aim to modify its structure, formulate targeting preparations or combinations with other drugs.Entities:
Keywords: antitumor; pharmacokinetics; targeting preparations; toxicity; tubeimoside-1
Year: 2022 PMID: 35910383 PMCID: PMC9335946 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2022.941270
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.988
FIGURE 1Chemical structure of TBMS-1.
The content of TBMS-1 in herbal medicine and proprietary Chinese medicine.
| Name | Content/Concentration | References |
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| Bolbostemmatis Rhizoma | 14.96 mg/g |
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| Ruzengning capsules | 8.97 mg/g |
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| Jiazhongxiao preparation | 995.30 μg/g |
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| Jibei Xiaozhong capsules | 6.90 mg/g |
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| Shuangbei capsules | 0.33 mg/g |
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FIGURE 2Antitumor activity of TBMS-1 on different physiological systems (R = respiratory system tumor, D = digestive system tumor, N = nervous system tumor, G = genital system tumor, O = other system tumors).
Antitumor activity of TBMS-1.
| Tumor type | Cell lines/Model | Activity/mechanisms of action | Application | References |
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| Lung cancer | NCI-H1299 cells | Overexpression of miR-126-5p inactivated the VEGF-A/VEGFR2/ERK signaling pathway to inhibit the activity of NCI-H1299 cells |
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| NCI-H1299 cells and NCI-H1975 cells | Disrupted the interaction between mitochondrial and lysosomal pathways leading to the killing of lung cancer cells |
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| A549 cells | Inhibited the proliferation and induced apoptosis of cells by increasing the Bax to Bcl-2 ratio, and decreasing COX-2 expression |
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| A549 and PC9 cells | Decreased cell proliferation and expression of cell growth-associated proteins, such as p21, p15, and Cyc B1, upregulated expression of proapoptotic factors, Bax and cleavage of procaspase-3, downregulated expression of antiapoptotic factors, Mcl-1 and cIAP-1, and activated the MAPK-JNK signaling pathway |
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| NCL-H460 cells and NCL-H460 xenograft mice model | Stimulated the proteasomal degradation of VEGFR2 and Tie2, leading to inhibition of AKT/mTOR signaling |
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| NCL-H460 cells | Exerted cytotoxicity in NCI-H460 lung cancer cells through nucleolar stress-induced p53/MDM2, mTOR, and NF-κB signaling pathways |
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| A549 cells | Increased the activity of Caspase-3, Caspase-9, and Parp to induce apoptosis |
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| PGCL3 cells | Reduced the secretion and activity of MMP-2, and decreased the adhesion rate of laminin and fibronectin to influence the invasion and adhesion of PGCL3 cells |
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| Lewis lung cancer spontaneous metastasis mice model | Downregulated the expression of metastasis-promoting genes |
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| A549/DDP cells | Upregulated the expression of p53 and Caspase-3, and reduced the ratio of Bcl-2/Bax to enhance the sensitivity of cancer cells to cisplatin |
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| Nasopharyngeal cancer | CNE-2Z cells | Inactivated Bcl-2, activated Bax and MAPK to induce tumor cell apoptosis |
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| Oral cancer | SCC15 cells and CAL27 cells | Induced intrinsic apoptosis through the ERK1/2/Bcl-2/Caspase-9/Caspase-3/PARP pathway, and the extrinsic apoptotic by decreasing the expression of Caspase-3, Caspase-7, and Caspase-8, and inhibited metastasis by decreasing c-Myc and MMP-7 protein expression |
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| Esophageal cancer | EC109 cells | Mitochondria-induced intrinsic apoptosis and p21/Cyc B1/cdc2 complex-related G2/M cell cycle arrest |
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| Gastric cancer | BGC823 cells | Upregulated the expression of Bax and downregulated expression of Bcl-2 to increase the ratio of Bax to Bcl-2 |
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| Liver cancer | HepG2 cells | Promoted apoptosis signaling pathways and production of reactive oxygen species by regulating TNF-α, NF-κB, JNK, and p53 |
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| HepG2 cells | Activated AMPK signaling pathway, increased the expression of Beclin 1, and LC3-Ⅱ/LC3-Ⅰ to induce autophagy |
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| HepG2 cells | Reduced the expression and activity of MMP-2 and MMP-9 proteins in HepG2 cells to inhibit cell migration and invasion |
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| Colorectal cancer | SW480 and HCT116 cells | Initiated autophagy by activating ROS/AMPK signaling and impaired autophagy flux by = inhibiting lysosomal proteolysis activity |
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| SW480 and HCT-8 cells | Inhibited cell proliferation and invasion via suppressing the Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway |
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| Glioblastoma | U87, LN229 cells and U87 xenograft mice model | Decreased the protein level of MET by increasing its ubiquitination degradation to inhibit proliferation, migration, and invasion of glioblastoma cells |
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| Glioma | U251 cells | Increased Bax/Bcl-2 and the concentration of ROS by promoting the release of cytochrome C and activation of Caspase-3 |
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| U251 cells | Downregulated the expression of miR-21 and upregulated that of PDCD4 to induce cell apoptosis |
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| U251 cells | Upregulated the expression of FADD, Caspase-8, and Caspase-3 proteins to induce apoptosis |
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| U251 cells | Inhibited DNA synthesis and induced G2/M phase arrest by targeting the PI3K/Akt/p21 and the CDK1/Cyc B1 signaling cascades |
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| Cervical cancer | HeLa cells | Decreased mitochondrial membrane potential, increased Cytc and Bax/Bcl-2 |
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| HeLa cells | Induced the depletion of mitochondrial transmembrane potential and activated the Caspase pathway to cause cell death. It activated the UPR signaling pathway to induce cytotoxic effects |
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| HeLa cells | Activated AMPK to initiate autophagy, blocked autophagic flux, and increased levels of damaged autophagy lysozyme to aggravate cytotoxic activity |
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| Ovarian cancer | A2780/DDP cells | Downregulated ERK1/2 and upregulated p38 signaling pathway to increase the inhibitory effect of cisplatin on A2780/DDP cells proliferation |
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| SKOV-3 cells | Increased Bax expression by inducing phosphorylation of p38 and MAPK and decreased Bcl-2 levels by reducing the phosphorylating of ERK1/2 to activate Caspase-3 |
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| Breast cancer | MDA-MB-231 cells and MDA-MB-231 xenograft mice model | Inhibited the binding ability of NF-κB to the promoter of CXCR4 to reduce the expression of CXCR4 and metastasis of breast cancer cells |
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| MDA-MB-231 cells | Induced autophagy through the PI3k-Akt-mTOR signal pathway |
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| Choriocarcinoma | JEG-3 cells | Induced mitochondrial dysfunction and regulated the p38/MAPK, ERK1/2 and PI3K/Akt signaling pathways |
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| Prostate carcinoma | DU145 cells | Induced mitochondrial apoptosis by increasing ROS generation, mitochondrial dysfunction, endoplasmic reticulum stress, Bcl-2 family protein and cleaved caspase-3 expression, and activating ASK-1 and its downstream targets p38 and JNK. |
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| Skin cancer | SCL-1 cells | Downregulated circ_0000376 to promote the expression of miR-203 to inhibit the proliferation, migration, and invasion of skin cancer cells, and accelerate cell apoptosis |
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| Leukemia | HL-60 cells | Decreased the expression of Cyc B1 and blocked the cell cycle |
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| HL-60 cells | Induced the differentiation of HL-60 cells to more mature cells with the functional characteristics of granulocytes |
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| Melanoma | A375 cells | Blocked the cell cycle in G2/M phase and induced apoptosis of A375 cells by downregulating Bcl-2 and upregulating Bax |
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| MV3, A375 cells and MV3 xenograft mice model | Inhibited cell proliferation through rapid hyperactivation of MEK1/2-ERK1/2 cascade by promoting PTP1B |
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| A375 cells and B16 melanoma cells xenograft mice model | Bound to mTOR kinase to suppress activation of mTORC1 leading to disruption of PD-1/PD-L1 interaction and enhanced cytotoxic killing of cancer cells by T cells by decreasing the abundance of PD-L1 |
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The IC50 value of TBMS-1 in various types of tumor cells.
| Cell line | IC50 value | Application | References |
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| NCI-H1299 lung cancer cells | 17.53 μmol/L |
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| NCI-H1975 lung cancer cells | 25.01 μmol/L |
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| A549 lung cancer cells | 12.30 μmol/L |
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| PC9 lung cancer cells | 10.20 μmol/L |
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| NCI-H460 lung cancer cells | 23.30 μmol/L |
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| PGCL3 lung cancer cells | 15.70 μmol/L |
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| A549/DDP cells | 12.44 μg/ml |
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| CNE-2Z nasopharyngeal cancer cells | 32.5 μmol/L |
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| SCC15 oral cancer cells | 11.6 μmol/L |
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| CAL27 oral cancer cells | 14.6 μmol/L |
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| EC109 esophageal cancer cells | 45 μmol/L |
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| HepG2 liver cancer cells | 15.5 μmol/L |
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| U251 glioma cells | 31.55 μg/ml |
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| HeLa cervical cancer cells | 34.8 μmol/L |
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| A2780/DDP cells | 16.10 μmol/L |
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| SKOV-3 ovarian cancer cells | 16 μmol/L |
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| Choriocarcinoma JEG-3 cells | 8.5 μmol/L |
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| Prostate carcinoma DU145 cells | 10 μmol/L |
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| Prostate carcinoma PC3 cells | 20 μmol/L |
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| Leukemia K562 cells | 19.7 μmol/L |
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| Leukemia HL-60 cells | 2.4 μmol/L |
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| Melanoma MV3 cells | 12 μmol/L |
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| Melanoma A375 cells | 8 μmol/L |
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The pharmacokinetics of TBMS-1.
| Drugs/Administration | Species | Dose | Detail | References |
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| TBMS-Ⅰ, i.v | Rats | 5 mg/kg | t1/2 |
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| TBMS-Ⅰ, p.o | Rats | 50 mg/kg | Tmax = 2.75 ± 0.96 h; the absolute oral bioavailability was 0.23 ± 0.13% |
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| TBMS-Ⅰ, p.o | Rats | 50 mg/kg | Cmax = 1,342 ± 404.50 ng/ml; Tmax = 2.85 ± 1.69 h; AUC(0–24h) and AUC(0-∞) were 8,800.03 ± 2,282.47, and 9,904.41 ± 3,447.84 mg/L*h, respectively; MRT(0–24h) = 7.02 ± 1.85 h and the terminal half-life (t1/2) = 4.60 ± 3.88 h |
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| TBMS-Ⅰ, i.v | ICR mice | 5 mg/kg | t1/2z = 6.8 ± 5.6 h |
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| TBMS-Ⅰ, p.o | ICR mice | 20 mg/kg | t1/2z = 2.3 ± 0.5 h; Tmax = 1.8 ± 1.3 h; the absolute availability was 1.0% |
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| TBMS-Ⅰ, i.m | Mice | 20 mg/kg | Tissue concentration: liver > spleen > blood > lung > heart > kidney > brain; the binding rates of TBMS-Ⅰ with plasma, liver and kidney tissue proteins were 17.1%, 28.1%, and 20.35%, respectively |
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The toxicity of TBMS-1.
| Cell lines/Model | Activity/mechanisms of action | Application | References | |
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| Acute toxicity | ICR mice | LD50 = 315.80 mg/kg (p.o.) and 40.28 mg/kg (i.m.) |
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| Rabbits | 0.08 mg/kg (i.m.): no substantial lesion; 1.2 mg/kg (i.m.): local hyperemia and inflammatory stimulation could be produced, and severe cases had brown degeneration |
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| Subacute toxicity Cytotoxicity | Dogs | 1.2 mg/kg (i.m.): punctate necrosis of the liver tissue and bleeding of the spleen |
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| MT-2 cells | LC50 = 59 μg/ml |
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| L-02 cells | Inhibition of growth of L-02 cells by mitochondrial pathway |
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FIGURE 3Toxicity of TBMS-1.