Abstract

BF211 is a synthetic molecule derived from bufalin (BF). The apoptosis-inducing effect of BF211 was stronger than that of BF while the acute toxicity of BF211 was much lower than that of BF. BF211 exhibited promising concentration-dependent anti-cancer effects in nude mice inoculated with A549 cells in vivo. The growth of A549 tumor xenografts was almost totally blocked by treatment with BF211 at 6 mg/kg. Notably, BF and BF211 exhibited differences in their binding affinity and kinetics to recombinant proteins of the α subunits of Na+/K+-ATPase. Furthermore, there was a difference in the effects of BF or BF211 on inhibiting the activity of porcine cortex Na+/K+-ATPase and in their time-dependent effects on intracellular Ca2+ levels in A549 cells. The time-dependent effects of BF or BF211 on the activation of Src, which was mediated by the Na+/K+-ATPase signalosome, in A549 cells were also different. Both BF and BF211 could induce apoptosis-related cascades, such as activation of caspase-3 and the cleavage of PARP (poly ADP-ribose polymerase) in A549 cells, in a concentration-dependent manner; however, the effects of BF211 on apoptosis-related cascades was stronger than that of BF. The results of the present study supported the importance of binding to the Na+/K+-ATPase α subunits in the mechanism of cardiac steroids and also suggested the possibility of developing new cardiac steroids with a stronger anti-cancer activity and lower toxicity as new anti-cancer agents.

Highlights

  • Bufalin (BF) is a bufadienolide isolated from a traditional Chinese medicine ChanSu, the dried secretion from the skin and parotid venom glands of Bufo bufo gargarizans Cantor or Bufo melanostictus Schneider [1]

  • The results suggested that BF211 exhibited stronger anti-proliferative effects than BF in these cells

  • The results indicated that BF211 more strongly induced apoptosis than BF, and the difference between BF and BF211 was significant at concentrations of 25 and 50 nM

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Summary

Introduction

Bufalin (BF) is a bufadienolide isolated from a traditional Chinese medicine ChanSu, the dried secretion from the skin and parotid venom glands of Bufo bufo gargarizans Cantor or Bufo melanostictus Schneider [1]. ChanSu had been used to clinically treat patients with various cancers in China for a long time [2,3]. In the past two decades, the study of the anti-cancer effects of cardiac steroids, including both bufadienolides and cardenolides, has been a hot topic in the anti-cancer drug research area [4,5,6]. The research of our group has focused on studying. Activities and Toxicity of a Bufalin Derivative PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0159789 July 26, 2016

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