Natural Product Albiziabioside A Conjugated with Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Kinase Inhibitor Dichloroacetate To Induce Apoptosis-Ferroptosis-M2-TAMs Polarization for Combined Cancer Therapy

2019 ◽  
Vol 62 (19) ◽  
pp. 8760-8772 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gaofei Wei ◽  
Jiahong Sun ◽  
Weijing Luan ◽  
Zhuang Hou ◽  
Shuai Wang ◽  
...  
Biomedicines ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (5) ◽  
pp. 119 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saleha Anwar ◽  
Taj Mohammad ◽  
Anas Shamsi ◽  
Aarfa Queen ◽  
Shahnaz Parveen ◽  
...  

Design and development of potential pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 3 (PDK3) inhibitors have gained attention because of their possible therapeutic uses in lung cancer therapy. In the present study, the binding affinity of naturally occurring alkaloids, hordenine, vincamine, tryptamine, cinchonine, and colcemid was measured with PDK3. The molecular docking and fluorescence binding studies suggested that all these compounds show a considerable binding affinity for PDK3. Among them, the affinity of hordenine to the PDK3 was excellent (K = 106 M−1) which was further complemented by isothermal titration calorimetric measurements. Hordenine binds in the active site pocket of PDK3 and forms a significant number of non-covalent interactions with functionally important residues. All-atom molecular dynamics (MD) simulation study suggested that the PDK3-hordenine complex is stabilized throughout the trajectory of 100ns and leads to fewer conformational changes. The enzyme inhibition studies showed that hordenine inhibits the activity of PDK3 with an IC50 value of 5.4 µM. Furthermore, hordenine showed a cytotoxic effect on human lung cancer cells (A549 and H1299) with an admirable IC50 value. However, it did not inhibit the growth of HEK293 cells up to 200 µM, indicating its non-toxicity to non-cancerous cell lines. In summary, our findings provide the basis for the therapeutic implication of hordenine and its derivatives in lung cancer and PDK3-related diseases after required in vivo validation.


2008 ◽  
Vol 294 (2) ◽  
pp. H570-H578 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen L. Archer ◽  
Mardi Gomberg-Maitland ◽  
Michael L. Maitland ◽  
Stuart Rich ◽  
Joe G. N. Garcia ◽  
...  

Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a lethal syndrome characterized by vascular obstruction and right ventricular failure. Although the fundamental cause remains elusive, many predisposing and disease-modifying abnormalities occur, including endothelial injury/dysfunction, bone morphogenetic protein receptor-2 gene mutations, decreased expression of the O2-sensitive K+ channel (Kv1.5), transcription factor activation [hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α) and nuclear factor-activating T cells], de novo expression of survivin, and increased expression/activity of both serotonin transporters and platelet-derived growth factor receptors. Together, these abnormalities create a cancerlike, proliferative, apoptosis-resistant phenotype in pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (PASMCs). A possible unifying mechanism for PAH comes from studies of fawn-hooded rats, which manifest spontaneous PAH and impaired O2 sensing. PASMC mitochondria normally produce reactive O2 species (ROS) in proportion to Po2. Superoxide dismutase 2 (SOD2) converts intramitochondrial superoxide to diffusible H2O2, which serves as a redox-signaling molecule, regulating pulmonary vascular tone and structure through effects on Kv1.5 and transcription factors. O2 sensing is mediated by this mitochondria-ROS-HIF-1α-Kv1.5 pathway. In PAH and cancer, mitochondrial metabolism and redox signaling are reversibly disordered, creating a pseudohypoxic redox state characterized by normoxic decreases in ROS, a shift from oxidative to glycolytic metabolism and HIF-1α activation. Three newly recognized mitochondrial abnormalities disrupt the mitochondria-ROS-HIF-1α-Kv1.5 pathway: 1) mitochondrial pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase activation, 2) SOD2 deficiency, and 3) fragmentation and/or hyperpolarization of the mitochondrial reticulum. The pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase inhibitor, dichloroacetate, corrects the mitochondrial abnormalities in experimental models of PAH and human cancer, causing a regression of both diseases. Mitochondrial abnormalities that disturb the ROS-HIF-1α-Kv1.5 O2-sensing pathway contribute to the pathogenesis of PAH and cancer and constitute promising therapeutic targets.


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