Calcium homeostasis is implicated
in some cancers, leading to the
possibility that selective control of calcium might lead to new cancer
drugs. On the basis of this idea, we designed an assay using a glioblastoma
cell line and screened a collection of 1000 unique bacterial extracts.
Isolation of the active compound from a hit extract led to the identification
of boholamide A (1), a 4-amido-2,4-pentadieneoate (APD)-class
peptide. Boholamide A (1) applied in the nanomolar range
induces an immediate influx of Ca2+ in glioblastoma and
neuronal cells. APD-class natural products are hypoxia-selective cytotoxins
that primarily target mitochondria. Like other APD-containing compounds, 1 is hypoxia selective. Since APD natural products have received
significant interest as potential chemotherapeutic agents, 1 provides a novel APD scaffold for the development of new anticancer
compounds.
Pierisketolide A (1) and pierisketones B and C (2 and 3), three diterpenes with an unusual A-homo-B-nor-ent-kaurane carbon skeleton, were isolated from the roots of Pieris formosa. Their structures were characterized by a series of spectroscopic methods, X-ray diffraction, and electronic circular dichroism (ECD). Pierisketolide A (1) exhibited an analgesic effect with a 45% writhe inhibition rate at a dose of 10.0 mg/kg. The plausible biosynthetic pathways of 1-3 are proposed.
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