Cancer and apoptosis: the apoptotic activity of plant and marine natural products and their potential as targeted cancer therapeutics

Cancer is a multifactorial, multi-stage disease, including complex cascades of signaling pathways—the cell growth governed by dysregulated and abrupt cell division. Due to the complexity and multi-regulatory cancer progression, cancer is still a challenging disease to treat and survive. The screenin...

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Main Authors: Chaudhry, Gul-e-Saba, Md Akim, Abdah, Yeong, Yik Sung, Tengku Sifzizul, Tengku Muhammad
Format: Article
Published: Frontiers Media 2022
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/100580/
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphar.2022.842376/full
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spelling my.upm.eprints.1005802023-11-21T08:12:04Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/100580/ Cancer and apoptosis: the apoptotic activity of plant and marine natural products and their potential as targeted cancer therapeutics Chaudhry, Gul-e-Saba Md Akim, Abdah Yeong, Yik Sung Tengku Sifzizul, Tengku Muhammad Cancer is a multifactorial, multi-stage disease, including complex cascades of signaling pathways—the cell growth governed by dysregulated and abrupt cell division. Due to the complexity and multi-regulatory cancer progression, cancer is still a challenging disease to treat and survive. The screening of extracts and fractions from plants and marine species might lead to the discovery of more effective compounds for cancer therapeutics. The isolated compounds and reformed analogs were known as future prospective contenders for anti-cancer chemotherapy. For example, Taxol, a potent mitotic inhibitor discovered from Taxus brevifolia, suppresses cell growth and arrest, induces apoptosis, and inhibits proliferation. Similarly, marine sponges show remarkable tumor chemo preventive and chemotherapeutic potential. However, there is limited research to date. Several plants and marine-derived anti-cancer compounds having the property to induce apoptosis have been approved for clinical trials. The anti-cancer activity kills the cell and slows the growth of cancer cells. Among cell death mechanisms, apoptosis induction is a more profound mechanism of cell death triggered by naturally isolated anti-cancer agents. Evading apoptosis is the major hurdle in killing cancer cells, a mechanism mainly regulated as intrinsic and extrinsic. However, it is possible to modify the apoptosis-resistant phenotype of the cell by altering many of these mechanisms. Various extracts and fractions successfully induce apoptosis, cell-cycle modulation, apoptosis, and anti-proliferative activity. Therefore, there is a pressing need to develop new anti-cancer drugs of natural origins to reduce the effects on normal cells. Here, we’ve emphasized the most critical elements: i) A better understanding of cancer progression and development and its origins, ii) Molecular strategies to inhibit the cell proliferation/Carcino-genesis, iii) Critical regulators of cancer cell proliferation and development, iv) Signaling Pathways in Apoptosis: Potential Targets for targeted therapeutics, v) Why Apoptosis induction is mandatory for effective chemotherapy, vi) Plants extracts/fractions as potential apoptotic inducers, vii) Marine extracts as Apoptotic inducers, viii) Marine isolated Targeted compounds as Apoptotic inducers (FDA Approved/treatment Phase). This study provides a potential therapeutic option for cancer, although more clinical studies are needed to verify its efficacy in cancer chemotherapy. Frontiers Media 2022-08-10 Article PeerReviewed Chaudhry, Gul-e-Saba and Md Akim, Abdah and Yeong, Yik Sung and Tengku Sifzizul, Tengku Muhammad (2022) Cancer and apoptosis: the apoptotic activity of plant and marine natural products and their potential as targeted cancer therapeutics. Frontiers in Pharmacology, 13. art. no. 842376. pp. 1-24. ISSN 1663-9812 https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphar.2022.842376/full 10.3389/fphar.2022.842376
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
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content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
description Cancer is a multifactorial, multi-stage disease, including complex cascades of signaling pathways—the cell growth governed by dysregulated and abrupt cell division. Due to the complexity and multi-regulatory cancer progression, cancer is still a challenging disease to treat and survive. The screening of extracts and fractions from plants and marine species might lead to the discovery of more effective compounds for cancer therapeutics. The isolated compounds and reformed analogs were known as future prospective contenders for anti-cancer chemotherapy. For example, Taxol, a potent mitotic inhibitor discovered from Taxus brevifolia, suppresses cell growth and arrest, induces apoptosis, and inhibits proliferation. Similarly, marine sponges show remarkable tumor chemo preventive and chemotherapeutic potential. However, there is limited research to date. Several plants and marine-derived anti-cancer compounds having the property to induce apoptosis have been approved for clinical trials. The anti-cancer activity kills the cell and slows the growth of cancer cells. Among cell death mechanisms, apoptosis induction is a more profound mechanism of cell death triggered by naturally isolated anti-cancer agents. Evading apoptosis is the major hurdle in killing cancer cells, a mechanism mainly regulated as intrinsic and extrinsic. However, it is possible to modify the apoptosis-resistant phenotype of the cell by altering many of these mechanisms. Various extracts and fractions successfully induce apoptosis, cell-cycle modulation, apoptosis, and anti-proliferative activity. Therefore, there is a pressing need to develop new anti-cancer drugs of natural origins to reduce the effects on normal cells. Here, we’ve emphasized the most critical elements: i) A better understanding of cancer progression and development and its origins, ii) Molecular strategies to inhibit the cell proliferation/Carcino-genesis, iii) Critical regulators of cancer cell proliferation and development, iv) Signaling Pathways in Apoptosis: Potential Targets for targeted therapeutics, v) Why Apoptosis induction is mandatory for effective chemotherapy, vi) Plants extracts/fractions as potential apoptotic inducers, vii) Marine extracts as Apoptotic inducers, viii) Marine isolated Targeted compounds as Apoptotic inducers (FDA Approved/treatment Phase). This study provides a potential therapeutic option for cancer, although more clinical studies are needed to verify its efficacy in cancer chemotherapy.
format Article
author Chaudhry, Gul-e-Saba
Md Akim, Abdah
Yeong, Yik Sung
Tengku Sifzizul, Tengku Muhammad
spellingShingle Chaudhry, Gul-e-Saba
Md Akim, Abdah
Yeong, Yik Sung
Tengku Sifzizul, Tengku Muhammad
Cancer and apoptosis: the apoptotic activity of plant and marine natural products and their potential as targeted cancer therapeutics
author_facet Chaudhry, Gul-e-Saba
Md Akim, Abdah
Yeong, Yik Sung
Tengku Sifzizul, Tengku Muhammad
author_sort Chaudhry, Gul-e-Saba
title Cancer and apoptosis: the apoptotic activity of plant and marine natural products and their potential as targeted cancer therapeutics
title_short Cancer and apoptosis: the apoptotic activity of plant and marine natural products and their potential as targeted cancer therapeutics
title_full Cancer and apoptosis: the apoptotic activity of plant and marine natural products and their potential as targeted cancer therapeutics
title_fullStr Cancer and apoptosis: the apoptotic activity of plant and marine natural products and their potential as targeted cancer therapeutics
title_full_unstemmed Cancer and apoptosis: the apoptotic activity of plant and marine natural products and their potential as targeted cancer therapeutics
title_sort cancer and apoptosis: the apoptotic activity of plant and marine natural products and their potential as targeted cancer therapeutics
publisher Frontiers Media
publishDate 2022
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/100580/
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphar.2022.842376/full
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