Título
Antilymphoma Effect of Incomptine A: In Vivo, In Silico, and Toxicological Studies
11627/577011627/5770
Autor
Calzada, Fernando
Bautista Redonda, Francisco Elihú
Hidalgo Figueroa, Sergio Nemorio
García Hernández, Normand
Barbosa Cabrera, Reyna Elizabeth
Velázquez, Claudia
Ordoñez Razo, Rosa María
Arietta García, Angel Giovanni
Resumen
"Incomptine A (IA) is a sesquiterpene lactone isolated from Decachaeta incompta that induces apoptosis, reactive oxygen species production, and a differential protein expression on the U-937 (diffuse histiocytic lymphoma) cell line. In this work, the antitumor potential of IA was investigated on Balb/c mice inoculated with U-937 cells and through the brine shrimp lethality (BSL) test. Furthermore, IA was subjected to molecular docking study using as targets proteins associated with processes of cancer as apoptosis, oxidative stress, and glycolytic metabolism. In addition to determining the potential toxicity of IA in human, its acute toxicity was performed in mice. Results reveals that IA showed high antilymphoma activity and BSL with an EC50 of 2.4 mg/kg and LC50 16.7 µg/mL, respectively. The molecular docking study revealed that IA has strong interaction on all targets used. In the acute oral toxicity, IA had a LD50 of 149 mg/kg. The results showed that the activities of IA including antilymphoma activity, BSL, acute toxicity, and in silico interactions were close to the methotrexate, an anticancer drug used as positive control. These findings suggest that IA may serve as a candidate for the development of a new drug to combat lymphoma.
Fecha de publicación
2021Tipo de publicación
articleDOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26216646Área de conocimiento
BIOLOGÍA MOLECULARColecciones
Editor
MDPIPalabras clave
Incomptine AAntilymphoma activity
Molecular docking
Acute toxicity
Brine shrimp lethality
Cancer
Non-Hodgkin lymphoma