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      Anticancer Activity of Sea Cucumber Triterpene Glycosides

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          Abstract

          Triterpene glycosides are characteristic secondary metabolites of sea cucumbers ( Holothurioidea, Echinodermata). They have hemolytic, cytotoxic, antifungal, and other biological activities caused by membranotropic action. These natural products suppress the proliferation of various human tumor cell lines in vitro and, more importantly, intraperitoneal administration in rodents of solutions of some sea cucumber triterpene glycosides significantly reduces both tumor burden and metastasis. The anticancer molecular mechanisms include the induction of tumor cell apoptosis through the activation of intracellular caspase cell death pathways, arrest of the cell cycle at S or G2/M phases, influence on nuclear factors, NF-κB, and up-down regulation of certain cellular receptors and enzymes participating in cancerogenesis, such as EGFR (epidermal growth factor receptor), Akt (protein kinase B), ERK (extracellular signal-regulated kinases), FAK (focal adhesion kinase), MMP-9 (matrix metalloproteinase-9) and others. Administration of some glycosides leads to a reduction of cancer cell adhesion, suppression of cell migration and tube formation in those cells, suppression of angiogenesis, inhibition of cell proliferation, colony formation and tumor invasion. As a result, marked growth inhibition of tumors occurs in vitro and in vivo. Some holothurian triterpene glycosides have the potential to be used as P-gp mediated MDR reversal agents in combined therapy with standard cytostatics.

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          The saponins: polar isoprenoids with important and diverse biological activities.

          Saponins are polar molecules that consist of a triterpene or steroid aglycone with one or more sugar chains. They are one of the most numerous and diverse groups of plant natural products. These molecules have important ecological and agronomic functions, contributing to pest and pathogen resistance and to food quality in crop plants. They also have a wide range of commercial applications in the food, cosmetics and pharmaceutical sectors. Although primarily found in plants, saponins are produced by certain other organisms, including starfish and sea cucumbers. The under explored biodiversity of this class of natural products is likely to prove to be a vital resource for discovery of high-value compounds. This review will focus on the biological activity of some of the best-studied examples of saponins, on the relationship between structure and function, and on prospects for synthesis of ‘‘designer’’ saponins.
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            Inhibition of cell survival, invasion, tumor growth and histone deacetylase activity by the dietary flavonoid luteolin in human epithelioid cancer cells.

            Phytochemical compounds and histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors are emerging as a new generation of anticancer agents with limited toxicity in cancer patients. We investigated the impact of luteolin, a dietary flavonoid, on survival, migration, invasion of cancer cells in vitro, and tumor growth in vivo. Luteolin (25-200μM) decreased the viability of human cancer cell lines originating from the lung (LNM35), colon (HT29), liver (HepG2) and breast (MCF7/6 and MDA-MB231-1833). Luteolin effectively increased the sub-G1 (apoptotic) fraction of cells through caspase-3 and -7 dependent pathways. We provide evidence that luteolin at sub-lethal/non-toxic concentrations inhibited the invasive potential of LNM35, MCF-7/6 and MDA-MB231-1833 cancer cells using Matrigel as well as the chick heart and Oris invasion assays. Moreover, we demonstrate for the first time that luteolin is a potent HDAC inhibitor that potentiates the cytotoxicity of cisplatin in LNM35 cells and decreases the growth of LNM35 tumor xenografts in athymic mice after intraperitoneal injection (20mg/kg/day for 18days) Thus, luteolin, in combination with standard anticancer drugs such as cisplatin, may be a promising HDAC inhibitor for the treatment of lung cancer. Copyright © 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Academic Editor
                Role: Academic Editor
                Journal
                Mar Drugs
                Mar Drugs
                marinedrugs
                Marine Drugs
                MDPI
                1660-3397
                06 March 2015
                March 2015
                : 13
                : 3
                : 1202-1223
                Affiliations
                G.B. Elyakov Pacific Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry, Far-Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Science, Prospect 100 letya Vladivostoka, 159, Vladivostok 690022, Russia; E-Mails: d_aminin@ 123456hotmail.com (D.L.A.); ekaterinamenchinskaya@ 123456gmail.com (E.S.M.); pislyagin@ 123456hotmail.com (E.A.P.); sialexandra@ 123456mail.ru (A.S.S.); avilov-1957@ 123456mail.ru (S.A.A.)
                Author notes
                [* ]Author to whom correspondence should be addressed; E-Mail: kalininv@ 123456piboc.dvo.ru ; Tel.: +7-423-2-31-11-68; Fax: +7-423-2-31-40-50.
                Article
                marinedrugs-13-01202
                10.3390/md13031202
                4377980
                25756523
                fe34d236-4f50-45b3-a85d-b43db1261fa9
                © 2015 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

                This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 20 January 2015
                : 25 February 2015
                Categories
                Review

                Pharmacology & Pharmaceutical medicine
                triterpene glycosides,sea cucumbers,antitumor activities,apoptosis,arrest of cell cycle

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