Discovery of Embelin as a Cell-Permeable, Small-Molecular Weight Inhibitor of XIAP through Structure-Based Computational Screening of a Traditional Herbal Medicine Three-Dimensional Structure Database
- 14 April 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
- Vol. 47 (10) , 2430-2440
- https://doi.org/10.1021/jm030420+
Abstract
The X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis (XIAP) is a promising new molecular target for the design of novel anticancer drugs aiming at overcoming apoptosis-resistance of cancer cells to chemotherapeutic agents and radiation therapy. Recent studies demonstrated that the BIR3 domain of XIAP where caspase-9 and Smac proteins bind is an attractive site for designing small-molecule inhibitors of XIAP. Through computational structure-based screening of an in-house traditional herbal medicine three-dimensional structure database of 8221 individual natural products, followed by biochemical testing of selected candidate compounds, we discovered embelin from the Japanese Ardisia herb as a small-molecular weight inhibitor that binds to the XIAP BIR3 domain. We showed that embelin binds to the XIAP BIR3 protein with an affinity similar to that of the natural Smac peptide using a fluorescence polarization-based binding assay. Our NMR analysis further conclusively confirmed that embelin interacts with several crucial residues in the XIAP BIR3 domain with which Smac and caspsase-9 bind. Embelin inhibits cell growth, induces apoptosis, and activates caspase-9 in prostate cancer cells with high levels of XIAP, but has a minimal effect on normal prostate epithelial and fibroblast cells with low levels of XIAP. In stably XIAP-transfected Jurkat cells, embelin effectively overcomes the protective effect of XIAP to apoptosis and enhances the etoposide-induced apoptosis and has a minimal effect in Jurkat cells transfected with vector control. Taken together, our results showed that embelin is a fairly potent, nonpeptidic, cell-permeable, small-molecule inhibitor of XIAP and represents a promising lead compound for designing an entirely new class of anticancer agents that target the BIR3 domain of XIAP.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Expression of inhibitors of apoptosis (IAP) proteins in non-small cell human lung cancerZeitschrift für Krebsforschung und Klinische Onkologie, 2002
- IAP proteins: blocking the road to death's doorNature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 2002
- Inhibitors of apoptosis proteins in prostate cancer cell linesThe Prostate, 2002
- Death and anti-death: tumour resistance to apoptosisNature Reviews Cancer, 2002
- The Protein Data BankNucleic Acids Research, 2000
- Expression and biological activity of X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis (XIAP) in human malignant gliomaCell Death & Differentiation, 1999
- Programmed Cell Death in Animal DevelopmentCell, 1997
- Programmed cell death in invertebratesCurrent Opinion in Genetics & Development, 1996
- NMRPipe: A multidimensional spectral processing system based on UNIX pipesJournal of Biomolecular NMR, 1995
- The killer and the executioner: how apoptosis controls malignancyCurrent Opinion in Immunology, 1995