Gianandrea Traversi, David Sasah Staid, Mario Fiore, Zulema Percario, Daniela Trisciuoglio, Roberto Antonioletti, Veronica Morea, Francesca Degrassi, Renata Cozzi
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引用次数: 8
Abstract
Background: Resveratrol and its natural stilbene-containing derivatives have been extensively investigated as potential chemotherapeutic agents. The synthetic manipulation of the stilbene scaffold has led to the generation of new analogues with improved anticancer activity and better bioavailability. In the present study we investigated the anticancer activity of a novel trimethoxystilbene derivative (3,4,4'-trimethoxylstilbene), where two methoxyl groups are adjacent on the benzene ring (ortho configuration), and compared its activity to 3,5,4'-trimethoxylstilbene, whose methoxyl groups are in meta configuration.
Results: We provide evidence that the presence of the two methoxyl groups in ortho configuration renders 3,4,4'-trimethoxystilbene more efficient than the meta isomer in inhibiting cell proliferation and producing apoptotic death in colorectal cancer cells. Confocal microscopy of α- and γ-tubulin staining shows that the novel compound strongly depolymerizes the mitotic spindle and produces fragmentation of the pericentrosomal material. Computer assisted docking studies indicate that both molecules potentially interact with γ-tubulin, and that 3,4,4'-trimethoxystilbene is likely to establish stronger interactions with the protein.
Conclusions: These findings demonstrate the ortho configuration confers higher specificity for γ-tubulin with respect to α-tubulin on 3,4,4' trimethoxystilbene, allowing it to be defined as a new γ-tubulin inhibitor. A strong interaction with γ-tubulin might be a defining feature of molecules with high anticancer activity, as shown for the 3,4,4' isomer.
期刊介绍:
Cell Division is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that encompasses all the molecular aspects of cell cycle control and cancer, cell growth, proliferation, survival, differentiation, signalling, gene transcription, protein synthesis, genome integrity, chromosome stability, centrosome duplication, DNA damage and DNA repair.
Cell Division provides an online forum for the cell-cycle community that aims to publish articles on all exciting aspects of cell-cycle research and to bridge the gap between models of cell cycle regulation, development, and cancer biology. This forum is driven by specialized and timely research articles, reviews and commentaries focused on this fast moving field, providing an invaluable tool for cell-cycle biologists.
Cell Division publishes articles in areas which includes, but not limited to:
DNA replication, cell fate decisions, cell cycle & development
Cell proliferation, mitosis, spindle assembly checkpoint, ubiquitin mediated degradation
DNA damage & repair
Apoptosis & cell death