Abstract

BackgroundHuman epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) has an important role in cancer aggressiveness and poor prognosis. HER2 has been used as a drug target for cancers. In particular, to effectively treat HER2-positive cancer, small molecule inhibitors were developed to target HER2 kinase. Knowing that curcumin has been used as food to inhibit cancer activity, this study evaluated the efficacy of natural curcumins and curcumin analogs as HER2 inhibitors using in vitro and in silico studies. The curcumin analogs considered in this study composed of 4 groups classified by their core structure, β-diketone, monoketone, pyrazole, and isoxazole.ResultsIn the present study, both computational and experimental studies were performed. The specificity of curcumin analogs selected from the docked results was examined against human breast cancer cell lines. The screened curcumin compounds were then subjected to molecular dynamics simulation study. By modifying curcumin analogs, we found that protein-ligand affinity increases. The benzene ring with a hydroxyl group could enhance affinity by forming hydrophobic interactions and the hydrogen bond with the hydrophobic pocket. Hydroxyl, carbonyl or methoxy group also formed hydrogen bonds with residues in the adenine pocket and sugar pocket of HER2-TK. These modifications could suggest the new drug design for potentially effective HER2-TK inhibitors. Two outstanding compounds, bisdemethylcurcumin (AS-KTC006) and 3,5-bis((E)-3,4-dimethoxystyryl)isoxazole (AS-KTC021 ),were well oriented in the binding pocket almost in the simulation time, 30 ns. This evidence confirmed the results of cell-based assays and the docking studies. They possessed more distinguished interactions than known HER2-TK inhibitors, considering them as a promising drug in the near future.ConclusionsThe series of curcumin compounds were screened using a computational molecular docking and followed by human breast cancer cell lines assay. Both AS-KTC006 and AS-KTC021 could inhibit breast cancer cell lines though inhibiting of HER2-TK. The intermolecular interactions were confirmed by molecular dynamics simulation studies. This information would explore more understanding of curcuminoid structures and HER2-TK.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1471-2105-15-261) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) has an important role in cancer aggressiveness and poor prognosis

  • There are two main approaches used to inhibit HER2, namely; monoclonal antibodies such as Trastuzumab, and small molecule inhibitors such as Lapatinib [6] and SYR127063 [7] targetingon tyrosine kinase domain (HER2-TK)

  • We investigated interactions between curcumin analogs and HER2 tyrosine kinase domain (HER2-TK) by using virtual screening based on molecular docking in order to find potential compounds against HER2-TK

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Summary

Introduction

Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) has an important role in cancer aggressiveness and poor prognosis. To effectively treat HER2-positive cancer, small molecule inhibitors were developed to target HER2 kinase. At present, there are two main approaches used to inhibit HER2, namely; monoclonal antibodies such as Trastuzumab, and small molecule inhibitors such as Lapatinib [6] and SYR127063 (called SYR for short) [7] targetingon tyrosine kinase domain (HER2-TK). Trastuzumab can downregulate HER expression, cardiotoxicity and drug resistance can be found in Trastuzumab-treated patients [8,9]. Side effects such as diarrhea, rash or nausea can be observed in Lapatinib treatment [10]. New inhibitors are urgently required for HER2-overexpressed cancer treatment

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