Previous work has shown that laulimalide, a sponge-derived natural product, resembles paclitaxel in enhancing tubulin assembly and in its effects on cellular microtubules. The two compounds, however, seem to have distinct binding sites on tubulin polymer. Nearly equimolar amounts of tubulin, laulimalide, and paclitaxel are recovered from microtubules formed with both drugs. In the present study, we searched for differences between laulimalide and paclitaxel in their interactions with tubulin polymer. Laulimalide was compared with paclitaxel and epothilone A, a natural product that competes with paclitaxel in binding to microtubules, for assembly properties at different temperatures and for effects of GTP and microtubule-associated proteins on assembly. Although minor differences were observed among the three drugs, their overall effects were highly similar, except that aberrant assembly products were observed more frequently with paclitaxel and that the polymers formed with laulimalide and epothilone A were more stable at 0 degrees C. The most dramatic difference observed between laulimalide and epothilone A was that only laulimalide was able to enhance assembly synergistically with paclitaxel, as would be predicted if the two drugs bound at different sites in polymer. Because stoichiometric amounts of laulimalide and paclitaxel can cause extensive tubulin assembly, maximum synergy was observed at lower temperatures under reaction conditions in which each drug alone is relatively inactive. Laulimalide-induced assembly, like paclitaxel-induced assembly, was inhibited by drugs that inhibit tubulin assembly by binding at either the colchicine- or vinblastine-binding site. When radiolabeled GTP is present in a reaction mixture with either laulimalide or paclitaxel, nucleotide hydrolysis occurs with incorporation of radiolabeled GDP into polymer.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1124/mol.66.1.113 | DOI Listing |
Life Sci
July 2022
College of Life Science, Northwest Normal University, Lanzhou 730070, Gansu, PR China. Electronic address:
Wangzaozin A, an ent-kaurene diterpenoid isolated from Isodon racemosa (Hemsl) Hara, promotes the polymerization of intracellular microtubules as well as purified tubulin, which is similar to other known microtubule stabilizers. Our pharmacological results showed that wangzaozin A induced G2/M cell cycle arrest and the significant inhibition of cancer cell proliferation. A molecular docking study indicated that wangzaozin A could bind to both the taxane and laulimalide (lau) sites on β-tubulin, which is a novel binding mode that differs from that of known microtubule stabilizers.
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March 2022
Department of Natural Sciences, Dominican University of California, San Rafael, California 94901, United States.
Herein, we report on naturally derived microtubule stabilizers with activity against triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) cell lines, including paclitaxel, fijianolide B/laulimalide (), fijianolide B di-acetate (), and two new semisynthetic analogs of , which include fijianolide J () and fijianolide L (). Similar to paclitaxel, compound demonstrated classic microtubule stabilizing activity with potent (GI = 0.7-17 nM) antiproliferative efficacy among the five molecularly distinct TNBC cell lines.
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February 2021
Department of Chemistry, Morgan State University, Baltimore, MD 21251, USA.
Microtubule stabilizing agents, such as paclitaxel, docetaxel, and cabazitaxel have been among the most used chemotherapeutic agents in the last decades for the treatment of a wide range of cancers in the clinic. One of the concerns that limit their use in clinical practice is their intrinsic and acquired drug resistance, which is common to most anti-cancer chemotherapeutics. Taccalonolides are a new class of microtubule stabilizers isolated from the roots of a few species in the genus of .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProteins
August 2019
Department of Chemical Sciences, Faculty of Exact Sciencies, Universidad Andres Bello, Sede Concepción, Autopista Concepción-Talcahuano, Talcahuano, Chile.
Microtubules (MT) are dynamic cytoskeletal components that play a crucial role in cell division. Disrupting MT dynamics by MT stabilizers is a widely employed strategy to control cell proliferation in cancer therapy. Most MT stabilizers bind to the taxol (TX) site located at the luminal interface between protofilaments, except laulimalide and peloruside A (PLA), which bind to an interfacial pocket on outer MT surface.
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February 2018
Organic Chemistry Section, Facultat de Química, Universitat de Barcelona, Diagonal 645, 08028 Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain.
The binding site of the macrolides laulimalide and peloruside A, which is different from that of the clinically useful drugs paclitaxel/taxol and ixabepilone (), is known to be between two adjacent β-tubulin units (). Here, we report our study of the binding of these molecules to an α1β1/α2β2-tubulin "tetramer" model. AutoDock 4.
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