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Data from Natural product derivative Bis(4-fluorobenzyl)trisulfide inhibits tumor growth by modification of β-tubulin at Cys 12 and suppression of microtubule dynamics

Authors :
Xiao Xu
Xiaobo Wang
Meihua Sui
Weimin Fan
Huifang Yan
Baoqin Geng
Michelle Gaylord
Stuart C. Feinstein
Yama Abassi
Jenny Zhu
Haoyun An
Jieying Wu
Biao Xi
Wanhong Xu
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Bis(4-fluorobenzyl)trisulfide (BFBTS) is a synthetic molecule derived from a bioactive natural product, dibenzyltrisulfide, found in a subtropical shrub, Petiveria allieacea. BFBTS has potent anticancer activities to a broad spectrum of tumor cell lines with IC50 values from high nanomolar to low micromolar and showed equal anticancer potency between tumor cell lines overexpressing multidrug-resistant gene, MDR1 (MCF7/adr line and KBv200 line), and their parental MCF7 line and KB lines. BFBTS inhibited microtubule polymerization dynamics in MCF7 cells, at a low nanomolar concentration of 54 nmol/L, while disrupting microtubule filaments in cells at low micromolar concentration of 1 μmol/L. Tumor cells treated with BFBTS were arrested at G2-M phase, conceivably resulting from BFBTS-mediated antimicrotubule activities. Mass spectrometry studies revealed that BFBTS bound and modified β-tubulin at residue Cys12, forming β-tubulin-SS-fluorobenzyl. The binding site differs from known antimicrotubule agents, suggesting that BFBTS functions as a novel antimicrotubule agent. BFBTS at a dose of 25 mg/kg inhibited tumor growth with relative tumor growth rates of 19.91%, 18.5%, and 23.42% in A549 lung cancer, Bcap-37 breast cancer, and SKOV3 ovarian cancer xenografts, respectively. Notably, BFBTS was more potent against MDR1-overexpressing MCF7/adr breast cancer xenografts with a relative tumor growth rate of 12.3% than paclitaxel with a rate of 43.0%. BFBTS displays a novel antimicrotubule agent with potentials for cancer therapeutics. [Mol Cancer Ther 2009;8(12):3318–30]

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....55e88c95a0d57591a83fb3686404a897
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/1535-7163.c.6531632