Cargando…

The Anti-Glioma Effect of Juglone Derivatives through ROS Generation

Juglone has been extensively reported as a natural antitumor pigment. However, it is easy to be oxidized due to active hydroxy in the quinone. Here, we designed some new juglone derivatives, as the hydroxy was replaced by methyl (D1), allyl (D2), butyl (D3), and benzyl (D4) groups. Nuclear magnetic...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Zhang, Jinsen, Fu, Minjie, Wu, Jinfeng, Fan, Fengfeng, Zhang, Xin, Li, Chunjie, Yang, Hui, Wu, Yonghe, Yin, Yiming, Hua, Wei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9237211/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35774612
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2022.911760
_version_ 1784736723794657280
author Zhang, Jinsen
Fu, Minjie
Wu, Jinfeng
Fan, Fengfeng
Zhang, Xin
Li, Chunjie
Yang, Hui
Wu, Yonghe
Yin, Yiming
Hua, Wei
author_facet Zhang, Jinsen
Fu, Minjie
Wu, Jinfeng
Fan, Fengfeng
Zhang, Xin
Li, Chunjie
Yang, Hui
Wu, Yonghe
Yin, Yiming
Hua, Wei
author_sort Zhang, Jinsen
collection PubMed
description Juglone has been extensively reported as a natural antitumor pigment. However, it is easy to be oxidized due to active hydroxy in the quinone. Here, we designed some new juglone derivatives, as the hydroxy was replaced by methyl (D1), allyl (D2), butyl (D3), and benzyl (D4) groups. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectra and mass spectrometry were applied to confirm the derivatives and oxidative products of juglone. U87 and U251 cell lines were used for tests in vitro, and primary human glioblastoma cells were applied for in vivo experiments. The CCK8 and EdU assay demonstrated the anti-tumor effect of the four derivatives, and IC50 for U87 was 3.99, 3.28, 7.60, and 11.84 μM, respectively. In U251, IC50 was 7.00, 5.43, 8.64, and 18.05 μM, respectively. D2 and D3 were further selected, and flow cytometry showed that apoptosis rates were increased after D2 or D3 treatment via ROS generation. Potential targets were predicted by network pharmacology analysis, most of which were associated with apoptosis, cell cycle, and metabolism pathway. CDC25B and DUSP1 were two of the most likely candidates for targets. The orthotopic glioblastoma model was established to evaluate the anti-glioma effect and side-effect of juglone derivatives, and the in vivo experiments confirmed the anti-glioma effects of juglone derivatives. In conclusion, new derivatives of juglone were created via chemical group substitution and could inhibit glioma cell viability and proliferation and induce apoptosis rate via ROS generation.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9237211
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-92372112022-06-29 The Anti-Glioma Effect of Juglone Derivatives through ROS Generation Zhang, Jinsen Fu, Minjie Wu, Jinfeng Fan, Fengfeng Zhang, Xin Li, Chunjie Yang, Hui Wu, Yonghe Yin, Yiming Hua, Wei Front Pharmacol Pharmacology Juglone has been extensively reported as a natural antitumor pigment. However, it is easy to be oxidized due to active hydroxy in the quinone. Here, we designed some new juglone derivatives, as the hydroxy was replaced by methyl (D1), allyl (D2), butyl (D3), and benzyl (D4) groups. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectra and mass spectrometry were applied to confirm the derivatives and oxidative products of juglone. U87 and U251 cell lines were used for tests in vitro, and primary human glioblastoma cells were applied for in vivo experiments. The CCK8 and EdU assay demonstrated the anti-tumor effect of the four derivatives, and IC50 for U87 was 3.99, 3.28, 7.60, and 11.84 μM, respectively. In U251, IC50 was 7.00, 5.43, 8.64, and 18.05 μM, respectively. D2 and D3 were further selected, and flow cytometry showed that apoptosis rates were increased after D2 or D3 treatment via ROS generation. Potential targets were predicted by network pharmacology analysis, most of which were associated with apoptosis, cell cycle, and metabolism pathway. CDC25B and DUSP1 were two of the most likely candidates for targets. The orthotopic glioblastoma model was established to evaluate the anti-glioma effect and side-effect of juglone derivatives, and the in vivo experiments confirmed the anti-glioma effects of juglone derivatives. In conclusion, new derivatives of juglone were created via chemical group substitution and could inhibit glioma cell viability and proliferation and induce apoptosis rate via ROS generation. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-06-14 /pmc/articles/PMC9237211/ /pubmed/35774612 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2022.911760 Text en Copyright © 2022 Zhang, Fu, Wu, Fan, Zhang, Li, Yang, Wu, Yin and Hua. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Pharmacology
Zhang, Jinsen
Fu, Minjie
Wu, Jinfeng
Fan, Fengfeng
Zhang, Xin
Li, Chunjie
Yang, Hui
Wu, Yonghe
Yin, Yiming
Hua, Wei
The Anti-Glioma Effect of Juglone Derivatives through ROS Generation
title The Anti-Glioma Effect of Juglone Derivatives through ROS Generation
title_full The Anti-Glioma Effect of Juglone Derivatives through ROS Generation
title_fullStr The Anti-Glioma Effect of Juglone Derivatives through ROS Generation
title_full_unstemmed The Anti-Glioma Effect of Juglone Derivatives through ROS Generation
title_short The Anti-Glioma Effect of Juglone Derivatives through ROS Generation
title_sort anti-glioma effect of juglone derivatives through ros generation
topic Pharmacology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9237211/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35774612
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2022.911760
work_keys_str_mv AT zhangjinsen theantigliomaeffectofjuglonederivativesthroughrosgeneration
AT fuminjie theantigliomaeffectofjuglonederivativesthroughrosgeneration
AT wujinfeng theantigliomaeffectofjuglonederivativesthroughrosgeneration
AT fanfengfeng theantigliomaeffectofjuglonederivativesthroughrosgeneration
AT zhangxin theantigliomaeffectofjuglonederivativesthroughrosgeneration
AT lichunjie theantigliomaeffectofjuglonederivativesthroughrosgeneration
AT yanghui theantigliomaeffectofjuglonederivativesthroughrosgeneration
AT wuyonghe theantigliomaeffectofjuglonederivativesthroughrosgeneration
AT yinyiming theantigliomaeffectofjuglonederivativesthroughrosgeneration
AT huawei theantigliomaeffectofjuglonederivativesthroughrosgeneration
AT zhangjinsen antigliomaeffectofjuglonederivativesthroughrosgeneration
AT fuminjie antigliomaeffectofjuglonederivativesthroughrosgeneration
AT wujinfeng antigliomaeffectofjuglonederivativesthroughrosgeneration
AT fanfengfeng antigliomaeffectofjuglonederivativesthroughrosgeneration
AT zhangxin antigliomaeffectofjuglonederivativesthroughrosgeneration
AT lichunjie antigliomaeffectofjuglonederivativesthroughrosgeneration
AT yanghui antigliomaeffectofjuglonederivativesthroughrosgeneration
AT wuyonghe antigliomaeffectofjuglonederivativesthroughrosgeneration
AT yinyiming antigliomaeffectofjuglonederivativesthroughrosgeneration
AT huawei antigliomaeffectofjuglonederivativesthroughrosgeneration