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Título
Podophyllic Aldehyde, a Podophyllotoxin Derivate, Elicits Different Cell Cycle Profiles Depending on the Tumor Cell Line: A Systematic Proteomic Analysis
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
natural products; podophyllic aldehyde; podophyllotoxin; etoposide; functional proteomics; antibody microarray; cell cycle; high-throughput screening
Fecha de publicación
2024
Editor
MDPI
Resumen
When new antitumor therapy drugs are discovered, it is essential to address new target
molecules from the point of view of chemical structure and to carry out efficient and systematic
evaluation. In the case of natural products and derived compounds, it is of special importance to
investigate chemomodulation to further explore antitumoral pharmacological activities. In this work,
the compound podophyllic aldehyde, a cyclolignan derived from the chemomodulation of the natural
product podophyllotoxin, has been evaluated for its viability, influence on the cell cycle, and effects on
intracellular signaling. We used functional proteomics characterization for the evaluation. Compared
with the FDA-approved drug etoposide (another podophyllotoxin derivative), we found interesting
results regarding the cytotoxicity of podophyllic aldehyde. In addition, we were able to observe the
effect of mitotic arrest in the treated cells. The use of podophyllic aldehyde resulted in increased
cytotoxicity in solid tumor cell lines, compared to etoposide, and blocked the cycle more successfully
than etoposide. High-throughput analysis of the deregulated proteins revealed a selective antimitotic
mechanism of action of podophyllic aldehyde in the HT-29 cell line, in contrast with other solid
and hematological tumor lines. Also, the apoptotic profile of podophyllic aldehyde was deciphered.
The cell death mechanism is activated independently of the cell cycle profile. The results of these
targeted analyses have also shown a significant response to the signaling of kinases, key proteins
involved in signaling cascades for cell proliferation or metastasis. Thanks to this comprehensive
analysis of podophyllic aldehyde, remarkable cytotoxic, antimitotic, and other antitumoral features
have been discovered that will repurpose this compound for further chemical transformations and
antitumoral analysis.
URI
DOI
10.3390/ijms25094631
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