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1.
J Biomol Struct Dyn ; 41(23): 14135-14151, 2023.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36943780

RÉSUMÉ

Traditional treatment of cancer has been plagued by a number of obstacles, such as multiple drug resistance, toxicity and financial constraints. In contrast, phytochemicals that modulate a variety of molecular mechanisms are garnering increasing interest in complementary and alternative medicine. Therefore, an approach based on network pharmacology was used in the present study to explore possible regulatory mechanisms of 6-shogaol as a potential treatment for cervical cancer (CC). A number of public databases were screened to collect information on the target genes of 6-shogaol (SuperPred, Targetnet, Swiss target prediction and PharmMapper), while targets pertaining to CC were taken from disease databases (DisGeNet and Genecards) and gene expression omnibus (GEO) provided expression datasets. With STRING and Cytoscape, protein-protein interactions (PPI) were generated and topology analysis along with CytoNCA were used to identify the Hub genes. The Gene Ontology (GO) database Enrichr was used to annotate the target proteins, while, using the Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) database, signaling pathway enrichment analysis was conducted. Molecular docking and survival analysis for the Hub genes revealed four genes (HSP90AA1, HRAS, ESR1 and EGFR) with lowest binding energy and majority of the Hub genes (EGFR, SRC, CASP-3, HSP90AA1, MTOR, MAPK-1, MDM2 and ESR1) were linked with the overall survival of CC patients. In conclusion, the present study provides the scientific evidence which strongly supports the use of 6-shogoal as an inhibitor of cellular proliferation, growth, migration as well as inducer of apoptosis via targeting the hub genes involved in the growth of CC.Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma.


Sujet(s)
Médicaments issus de plantes chinoises , Tumeurs du col de l'utérus , Humains , Femelle , Tumeurs du col de l'utérus/traitement médicamenteux , Tumeurs du col de l'utérus/génétique , Simulation de docking moléculaire , Pharmacologie des réseaux , Récepteurs ErbB
2.
Hum Mol Genet ; 24(15): 4296-305, 2015 Aug 01.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25948553

RÉSUMÉ

Defective expression of frataxin is responsible for the inherited, progressive degenerative disease Friedreich's Ataxia (FRDA). There is currently no effective approved treatment for FRDA and patients die prematurely. Defective frataxin expression causes critical metabolic changes, including redox imbalance and ATP deficiency. As these alterations are known to regulate the tyrosine kinase Src, we investigated whether Src might in turn affect frataxin expression. We found that frataxin can be phosphorylated by Src. Phosphorylation occurs primarily on Y118 and promotes frataxin ubiquitination, a signal for degradation. Accordingly, Src inhibitors induce accumulation of frataxin but are ineffective on a non-phosphorylatable frataxin-Y118F mutant. Importantly, all the Src inhibitors tested, some of them already in the clinic, increase frataxin expression and rescue the aconitase defect in frataxin-deficient cells derived from FRDA patients. Thus, Src inhibitors emerge as a new class of drugs able to promote frataxin accumulation, suggesting their possible use as therapeutics in FRDA.


Sujet(s)
Ataxie de Friedreich/génétique , Protéines de liaison au fer/biosynthèse , src-Family kinases/génétique , Adénosine triphosphate/déficit , Adénosine triphosphate/génétique , Antienzymes/pharmacologie , Ataxie de Friedreich/traitement médicamenteux , Ataxie de Friedreich/anatomopathologie , Régulation de l'expression des gènes/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Humains , Protéines de liaison au fer/génétique , Oxydoréduction , Ubiquitination/génétique , src-Family kinases/antagonistes et inhibiteurs , src-Family kinases/métabolisme ,
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