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Molecular and Biological Investigation of Isolated Marine Fungal Metabolites as Anticancer Agents: A Multi-Target Approach

Cancer is the leading cause of death globally, with an increasing number of cases being annually reported. Nature-derived metabolites have been widely studied for their potential programmed necrosis, cytotoxicity, and anti-proliferation leading to enrichment for the modern medicine, particularly wit...

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Autores principales: Bogari, Hanin A., Elhady, Sameh S., Darwish, Khaled M., Refaey, Mohamed S., Mohamed, Radi A., Abdelhameed, Reda F. A., Almalki, Ahmad J., Aldurdunji, Mohammed M., Lashkar, Manar O., Alshehri, Samah O., Malatani, Rania T., Yamada, Koji, Khedr, Amgad I. M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9964656/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36837781
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/metabo13020162
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author Bogari, Hanin A.
Elhady, Sameh S.
Darwish, Khaled M.
Refaey, Mohamed S.
Mohamed, Radi A.
Abdelhameed, Reda F. A.
Almalki, Ahmad J.
Aldurdunji, Mohammed M.
Lashkar, Manar O.
Alshehri, Samah O.
Malatani, Rania T.
Yamada, Koji
Khedr, Amgad I. M.
author_facet Bogari, Hanin A.
Elhady, Sameh S.
Darwish, Khaled M.
Refaey, Mohamed S.
Mohamed, Radi A.
Abdelhameed, Reda F. A.
Almalki, Ahmad J.
Aldurdunji, Mohammed M.
Lashkar, Manar O.
Alshehri, Samah O.
Malatani, Rania T.
Yamada, Koji
Khedr, Amgad I. M.
author_sort Bogari, Hanin A.
collection PubMed
description Cancer is the leading cause of death globally, with an increasing number of cases being annually reported. Nature-derived metabolites have been widely studied for their potential programmed necrosis, cytotoxicity, and anti-proliferation leading to enrichment for the modern medicine, particularly within the last couple of decades. At a more rapid pace, the concept of multi-target agents has evolved from being an innovative approach into a regular drug development procedure for hampering the multi-fashioned pathophysiology and high-resistance nature of cancer cells. With the advent of the Red Sea Penicillium chrysogenum strain S003-isolated indole-based alkaloids, we thoroughly investigated the molecular aspects for three major metabolites: meleagrin (MEL), roquefortine C (ROC), and isoroquefortine C (ISO) against three cancer-associated biological targets Cdc-25A, PTP-1B, and c-Met kinase. The study presented, for the first time, the detailed molecular insights and near-physiological affinity for these marine indole alkaloids against the assign targets through molecular docking-coupled all-atom dynamic simulation analysis. Findings highlighted the superiority of MEL’s binding affinity/stability being quite in concordance with the in vitro anticancer activity profile conducted via sulforhodamine B bioassay on different cancerous cell lines reaching down to low micromolar or even nanomolar potencies. The advent of lengthy structural topologies via the metabolites’ extended tetracyclic cores and aromatic imidazole arm permitted multi-pocket accommodation addressing the selectivity concerns. Additionally, the presence decorating polar functionalities on the core hydrophobic tetracyclic ring contributed compound’s pharmacodynamic preferentiality. Introducing ionizable functionality with more lipophilic characters was highlighted to improve binding affinities which was also in concordance with the conducted drug-likeness/pharmacokinetic profiling for obtaining a balanced pharmacokinetic/dynamic profile. Our study adds to the knowledge regarding drug development and optimization of marine-isolated indole-based alkaloids for future iterative synthesis and pre-clinical investigations as multi-target anticancer agents.
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spelling pubmed-99646562023-02-26 Molecular and Biological Investigation of Isolated Marine Fungal Metabolites as Anticancer Agents: A Multi-Target Approach Bogari, Hanin A. Elhady, Sameh S. Darwish, Khaled M. Refaey, Mohamed S. Mohamed, Radi A. Abdelhameed, Reda F. A. Almalki, Ahmad J. Aldurdunji, Mohammed M. Lashkar, Manar O. Alshehri, Samah O. Malatani, Rania T. Yamada, Koji Khedr, Amgad I. M. Metabolites Article Cancer is the leading cause of death globally, with an increasing number of cases being annually reported. Nature-derived metabolites have been widely studied for their potential programmed necrosis, cytotoxicity, and anti-proliferation leading to enrichment for the modern medicine, particularly within the last couple of decades. At a more rapid pace, the concept of multi-target agents has evolved from being an innovative approach into a regular drug development procedure for hampering the multi-fashioned pathophysiology and high-resistance nature of cancer cells. With the advent of the Red Sea Penicillium chrysogenum strain S003-isolated indole-based alkaloids, we thoroughly investigated the molecular aspects for three major metabolites: meleagrin (MEL), roquefortine C (ROC), and isoroquefortine C (ISO) against three cancer-associated biological targets Cdc-25A, PTP-1B, and c-Met kinase. The study presented, for the first time, the detailed molecular insights and near-physiological affinity for these marine indole alkaloids against the assign targets through molecular docking-coupled all-atom dynamic simulation analysis. Findings highlighted the superiority of MEL’s binding affinity/stability being quite in concordance with the in vitro anticancer activity profile conducted via sulforhodamine B bioassay on different cancerous cell lines reaching down to low micromolar or even nanomolar potencies. The advent of lengthy structural topologies via the metabolites’ extended tetracyclic cores and aromatic imidazole arm permitted multi-pocket accommodation addressing the selectivity concerns. Additionally, the presence decorating polar functionalities on the core hydrophobic tetracyclic ring contributed compound’s pharmacodynamic preferentiality. Introducing ionizable functionality with more lipophilic characters was highlighted to improve binding affinities which was also in concordance with the conducted drug-likeness/pharmacokinetic profiling for obtaining a balanced pharmacokinetic/dynamic profile. Our study adds to the knowledge regarding drug development and optimization of marine-isolated indole-based alkaloids for future iterative synthesis and pre-clinical investigations as multi-target anticancer agents. MDPI 2023-01-21 /pmc/articles/PMC9964656/ /pubmed/36837781 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/metabo13020162 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Bogari, Hanin A.
Elhady, Sameh S.
Darwish, Khaled M.
Refaey, Mohamed S.
Mohamed, Radi A.
Abdelhameed, Reda F. A.
Almalki, Ahmad J.
Aldurdunji, Mohammed M.
Lashkar, Manar O.
Alshehri, Samah O.
Malatani, Rania T.
Yamada, Koji
Khedr, Amgad I. M.
Molecular and Biological Investigation of Isolated Marine Fungal Metabolites as Anticancer Agents: A Multi-Target Approach
title Molecular and Biological Investigation of Isolated Marine Fungal Metabolites as Anticancer Agents: A Multi-Target Approach
title_full Molecular and Biological Investigation of Isolated Marine Fungal Metabolites as Anticancer Agents: A Multi-Target Approach
title_fullStr Molecular and Biological Investigation of Isolated Marine Fungal Metabolites as Anticancer Agents: A Multi-Target Approach
title_full_unstemmed Molecular and Biological Investigation of Isolated Marine Fungal Metabolites as Anticancer Agents: A Multi-Target Approach
title_short Molecular and Biological Investigation of Isolated Marine Fungal Metabolites as Anticancer Agents: A Multi-Target Approach
title_sort molecular and biological investigation of isolated marine fungal metabolites as anticancer agents: a multi-target approach
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9964656/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36837781
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/metabo13020162
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