1. Academic Validation
  2. Target Separation and Potential Anticancer Activity of Withanolide-Based Glucose Transporter Protein 1 Inhibitors from Physalis angulata var. villosa

Target Separation and Potential Anticancer Activity of Withanolide-Based Glucose Transporter Protein 1 Inhibitors from Physalis angulata var. villosa

  • J Nat Prod. 2023 Dec 20. doi: 10.1021/acs.jnatprod.3c00613.
Jinghan Zhang 1 Xiao Xu 1 Yu Zhao 1 Chunling Ren 1 Mengzhen Gu 1 Haili Zhang 1 Peiye Wu 1 Yun Wang 1 Lingyi Kong 1 Chao Han 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 State Key Laboratory of Natural Medicines, Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Bioactive Natural Product Research, School of Traditional Chinese Pharmacy, China Pharmaceutical University, 24 Tong Jia Xiang, Nanjing 210009, P.R. China.
Abstract

The glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1) protein is involved in the basal-level absorption of glucose in tumor cells. Inhibiting GLUT1 decreases tumor cell proliferation and induces tumor cell damage. Natural GLUT1 inhibitors have been studied only to a small extent, and the structures of known natural GLUT1 inhibitors are limited to a few classes of Natural Products. Therefore, discovering and researching other natural GLUT1 inhibitors with novel scaffolds are essential. Physalis angulata L. var. villosa is a plant known as Mao-Ku-Zhi (MKZ). Withanolides are the main phytochemical components of MKZ. MKZ extracts and the components of MKZ exhibited antitumor activity in recent pharmacological studies. However, the antitumor-active components of MKZ and their molecular mechanisms remain unknown. A cell membrane-biomimetic nanoplatform (CM@Fe3O4/MIL-101) was used for target separation of potential GLUT1 inhibitors from MKZ. A new withanolide, physagulide Y (2), together with six known withanolides (1, 3-7), was identified as a potential GLUT1 Inhibitor. Physagulide Y was the most potent GLUT1 Inhibitor, and its antitumor activity and possible mechanism of action were explored in MCF-7 human Cancer cells. These findings advance the development of technologies for the targeted separation of Natural Products and identify a new molecular framework for the investigation of natural GLUT1 inhibitors.

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