Biological Evaluation and Docking Studies of Synthetic Oleananetype Triterpenoids
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Ortega Muñoz, Mariano; Rodríguez Serrano, Fernando; Reyes Berbel, Eduardo de los; Mut Salud, Nuria; Hernández Mateo, Fernando; Rodríguez López, Andrea; Garrido, José M.; López Jaramillo, Francisco Javier; Santoyo González, FranciscoEditorial
American Chemical Society
Fecha
2018-09-20Referencia bibliográfica
Ortega-Muñoz, M., Rodríguez-Serrano, F., De los Reyes-Berbel, E., Mut-Salud, N., Hernández-Mateo, F., Rodríguez-López, A., ... & Santoyo-González, F. (2018). Biological Evaluation and Docking Studies of Synthetic Oleanane-type Triterpenoids. ACS omega, 3(9), 11455-11468.
Patrocinador
This work was supported by a grant from Ramón Areces Foundation (Madrid, Spain) and by grant CTQ2014-55474- C2-1-R from the Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (MINECO) co-financed by FEDER funds.Resumen
Saponins are potential wide-spectrum antitumor
drugs, and copper(I) catalyzed azide−alkyne 1,3-dipolar
cycloaddition is a suitable approach to synthesizing saponinlike
compounds by regioselective glycosylation of the C2/C3
hydroxyl and C28 carboxylic groups of triterpene aglycones
maslinic acid (MA) and oleanolic acid (OA). Biological
studies on the T-84 human colon carcinoma cell line support
the role of the hydroxyl groups at C2/C3, the influence of the
aglycone, and the bulky nature of the substituents in C28. OA
bearing a α-D-mannose moiety at C28 (compound 18)
focused our interest because the estimated inhibitory concentration 50 was similar to that reported for ginsenoside Rh2 against
colon cancer cells and it inhibits the G1−S phase transition affecting the cell viability and apoptosis. Considering that
triterpenoids from natural sources have been identified as inhibitors of nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B
cell (NF-κB) signaling, docking studies were conducted to evaluate whether NF-κB may be a potential target. Results are
consistent with the biological study and predict a similar binding mode of MA and compound 18 to the p52 subunit from NF-
κB but not for OA. The fact that the binding site is shared by the NF-κB inhibitor 6,6-dimethyl-2-(phenylimino)-6,7-
dihydrobenzo[d][1,3]oxathiol-4(5H)-one supports the result and points to NF-κB as a potential target of both MA and
compound 18.