Daurinol, a catalytic inhibitor of topoisomerase II alpha, suppresses SNU-840 ovarian cancer cell proliferation through cell cycle arrest in S phase
- Authors
- Kang, Kyungsu; Nho, Chu Won; Kim, Nam Doo; Song, Dae-Geun; Park, Young Gyun; Kim, Minkyun; Pan, Cheol-Ho; Shin, Dongyun; Oh, Seung Hyun; Oh, Ho-Suk
- Issue Date
- 2014-08
- Publisher
- SPANDIDOS PUBL LTD
- Citation
- INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ONCOLOGY, v.45, no.2, pp.558 - 566
- Abstract
- Daurinol, a lignan from the ethnopharmacological plant Haplophyllum dauricum, was recently reported to be a novel topoisomerase II inhibitor and an alternative to the clinical anticancer agent etoposide based on a colorectal cancer model. In the present study, we elucidated the detailed biochemical mechanism underlying the inhibition of human topoisomerase II alpha by daurinol based on a molecular docking study and in vitro biochemical experiments. The computational simulation predicted that daurinol binds to the ATP-binding pocket of topoisomerase Ha. In a biochemical assay, daurinol (10-100 mu M) inhibited the catalytic activity of topoisomerase Ha in an ATP concentration-dependent manner and suppressed the ATP hydrolysis activity of the enzyme. However, daurinol did not inhibit topoisomerase I activity, most likely because topoisomerase I does not contain an ATP-binding domain. We also evaluated the anti-proliferative activity of daurinol in ovarian, small cell lung and testicular cancer cells, common target cancers treated with etoposide. Daurinol potently inhibited SNU-840 human ovarian cancer cell proliferation through cell cycle arrest in S phase, while etoposide induced G2/M phase arrest. Daurinol induced the increased expression of cyclin E, cyclin A and E2F-1, which are important proteins regulating S phase initiation and progression. Daurinol did not induce abnormal cell and nuclear enlargement in SNU-840 cells, in contrast to etoposide. Based on these data, we suggest that daurinol is a potential anticancer drug candidate for the treatment of human ovarian cancer with few side effects.
- Keywords
- ETOPOSIDE; EXTENSION; ENZYME; ETOPOSIDE; EXTENSION; ENZYME; daurinol; topoisomerase II alpha inhibitor; ovarian cancer; ATP binding pocket; secondary leukemia
- ISSN
- 1019-6439
- URI
- https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/126543
- DOI
- 10.3892/ijo.2014.2442
- Appears in Collections:
- KIST Article > 2014
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