Artículo de revista
XIAP as a Target of New Small Organic Natural Molecules Inducing Human Cancer Cell Death
Fecha
2019Registro en:
Muñoz, D.; Brucoli, M.; Zecchini, S.; Sandoval-Hernandez, A.; Arboleda, G.; Lopez-Vallejo, F.; Delgado, W.; Giovarelli, M.; Coazzoli, M.; Catalani, E.; Palma, C.D.; Perrotta, C.; Cuca, L.; Clementi, E.; Cervia, D. XIAP as a Target of New Small Organic Natural Molecules Inducing Human Cancer Cell Death. Cancers 2019, 11, 1336.
10.3390/cancers11091336
Autor
Muñoz, Diego
Resumen
X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis protein (XIAP) is an emerging crucial therapeutic target in
cancer. We report on the discovery and characterisation of small organic molecules from Piper genus
plants exhibiting XIAP antagonism, namely erioquinol, a quinol substituted in the 4-position with
an alkenyl group and the alkenylphenols eriopodols A–C. Another isolated compound was
originally identified as gibbilimbol B. Erioquinol was the most potent inhibitor of human cancer cell
viability when compared with gibbilimbol B and eriopodol A was listed as intermediate.
Gibbilimbol B and eriopodol A induced apoptosis through mitochondrial permeabilisation and
caspase activation while erioquinol acted on cell fate via caspase-independent/non-apoptotic
mechanisms, likely involving mitochondrial dysfunctions and aberrant generation of reactive
oxygen species. In silico modelling and molecular approaches suggested that all molecules inhibit
XIAP by binding to XIAP-baculoviral IAP repeat domain. This demonstrates a novel aspect of XIAP
as a key determinant of tumour control, at the molecular crossroad of caspasedependent/
independent cell.