Maneenet Juthamart, Tawila Ahmed M, Nguyen Hung Hong, Phan Nguyen Duy, Monthakantirat Orawan, Daodee Supawadee, Boonyarat Chantana, Khamphukdee Charinya, Chulikhit Yaowared, Awale Suresh
Natural Drug Discovery Laboratory, Institute of Natural Medicine, University of Toyama, 2630 Sugitani, Toyama 930-0194, Japan.
Division of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Khon Kaen University, Khon Kaen 40002, Thailand.
Plants (Basel). 2025 Jul 7;14(13):2074. doi: 10.3390/plants14132074.
Pancreatic cancer cells exhibit a remarkable ability to tolerate nutrient deprivation, a phenomenon termed "austerity," which enables their survival within the hypovascular tumor microenvironment. Conventional anticancer therapies frequently fail to effectively target these resilient neoplastic cells, posing a significant challenge to the therapeutic management of pancreatic cancer. Consequently, targeting austerity, the ability of cancer cells to tolerate nutrient starvation, represents a promising anti-austerity strategy for developing novel pancreatic cancer therapeutics. In this study, we investigated calliviminone A (CVM-A), a phloroglucinol-meroterpenoid isolated from leaves, for its anti-austerity activity against PANC-1 human pancreatic cancer cells. Calliviminone A exhibited potent preferential cytotoxicity in nutrient-deprived medium (NDM) with a PC of 0.57 µM, while showing minimal toxicity in nutrient-rich Dulbecco's Modified Eagle's medium (IC = 45.2 µM), indicating a favorable therapeutic index. Real-time live-cell imaging revealed that CVM-A induced significant morphological changes, including cell shrinkage and membrane blebbing, leading to cell death within 24 h of NDM. Furthermore, under normal nutrient conditions in Dulbecco's Modified Eagle's Medium (DMEM), CVM-A significantly inhibited PANC-1 cell migration (up to 47% reduction at 20 µM) and colony formation (over 80% suppression at 25 µM), suggesting its antimetastatic potential. Western blot studies demonstrated that CVM-A downregulated key survival components of the PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling pathway, completely inhibiting Akt and p-Akt at 2.5 µM in NDM, and suppressing insulin-induced Akt activation. These findings highlight CVM-A as a promising lead compound for developing novel anticancer therapies that target the adaptive survival mechanisms and metastatic potential of pancreatic cancer in nutrient-deprived microenvironments.
胰腺癌细胞表现出显著的耐受营养剥夺的能力,这种现象被称为“紧缩”,这使得它们能够在低血管肿瘤微环境中存活。传统的抗癌疗法常常无法有效靶向这些具有韧性的肿瘤细胞,这对胰腺癌的治疗管理构成了重大挑战。因此,针对癌细胞耐受营养饥饿的“紧缩”能力进行靶向治疗,是开发新型胰腺癌治疗方法的一种有前景的抗“紧缩”策略。在本研究中,我们研究了从叶子中分离出的间苯三酚-杂萜类化合物卡里维米诺酮A(CVM-A)对PANC-1人胰腺癌细胞的抗“紧缩”活性。卡里维米诺酮A在营养剥夺培养基(NDM)中表现出强效的优先细胞毒性,半数抑制浓度(PC)为0.57 μM,而在营养丰富的杜氏改良 Eagle培养基(IC = 45.2 μM)中显示出最小毒性,表明其具有良好的治疗指数。实时活细胞成像显示,CVM-A诱导了显著的形态变化,包括细胞收缩和膜泡形成,导致在NDM中24小时内细胞死亡。此外,在杜氏改良 Eagle培养基(DMEM)的正常营养条件下,CVM-A显著抑制PANC-1细胞迁移(20 μM时减少高达47%)和集落形成(25 μM时抑制超过80%),表明其具有抗转移潜力。蛋白质印迹研究表明,CVM-A下调了PI3K/Akt/mTOR信号通路的关键存活成分,在NDM中2.5 μM时完全抑制Akt和磷酸化Akt,并抑制胰岛素诱导的Akt激活。这些发现突出了CVM-A作为一种有前景的先导化合物,可用于开发针对营养剥夺微环境中胰腺癌适应性存活机制和转移潜力的新型抗癌疗法。