Back to Search Start Over

Traditional Medicinal Plants as a Source of Inspiration for Osteosarcoma Therapy

Authors :
Kazantseva, Liliya
Becerra, Jose
Santos-Ruiz, Leonor
[Kazantseva, Liliya] Inst Invest Biomed Malaga & Plataforma Nanomed IB, Malaga 29590, Spain
[Becerra, Jose] Inst Invest Biomed Malaga & Plataforma Nanomed IB, Malaga 29590, Spain
[Santos-Ruiz, Leonor] Inst Invest Biomed Malaga & Plataforma Nanomed IB, Malaga 29590, Spain
[Becerra, Jose] Inst Salud Carlos III, Ctr Invest Biomed Red Bioingn Biomat & Nanomed CI, Madrid 28029, Spain
[Santos-Ruiz, Leonor] Inst Salud Carlos III, Ctr Invest Biomed Red Bioingn Biomat & Nanomed CI, Madrid 28029, Spain
[Becerra, Jose] Univ Malaga, Dept Cell Biol Genet & Physiol, Malaga 29071, Spain
[Santos-Ruiz, Leonor] Univ Malaga, Dept Cell Biol Genet & Physiol, Malaga 29071, Spain
European Union
Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (MINECO)
Instituto de Salud Carlos III
CIBER-Consorcio Centro de Investigacion Biomedica en Red
Consejeria de Salud y Asuntos Sociales de la Junta de Andalucia
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Mdpi, 2022.

Abstract

Osteosarcoma is one of the most common types of bone cancers among paediatric patients. Despite the advances made in surgery, chemo-, and radiotherapy, the mortality rate of metastatic osteosarcoma remains unchangeably high. The standard drug combination used to treat this bone cancer has remained the same for the last 20 years, and it produces many dangerous side effects. Through history, from ancient to modern times, nature has been a remarkable source of chemical diversity, used to alleviate human disease. The application of modern scientific technology to the study of natural products has identified many specific molecules with anti-cancer properties. This review describes the latest discovered anti-cancer compounds extracted from traditional medicinal plants, with a focus on osteosarcoma research, and on their cellular and molecular mechanisms of action. The presented compounds have proven to kill osteosarcoma cells by interfering with different pathways: apoptosis induction, stimulation of autophagy, generation of reactive oxygen species, etc. This wide variety of cellular targets confer natural products the potential to be used as chemotherapeutic drugs, and also the ability to act as sensitizers in drug combination treatments. The major hindrance for these molecules is low bioavailability. A problem that may be solved by chemical modification or nano-encapsulation.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......2636..1b0f3125ca2024727324a2d58ad37d9a