TY - JOUR
T1 - Antitumour activity of 3-chlorodeoxylapachol, a naphthoquinone from Avicennia germinans collected from an experimental plot in southern Florida
AU - Jones, William P.
AU - Lobo-Echeverri, Tatiana
AU - Mi, Qiuwen
AU - Chai, Heebyung
AU - Lee, Dongho
AU - Soejarto, Djaja D.
AU - Cordell, Geoffrey A.
AU - Pezzuto, John M.
AU - Swanson, Steven M.
AU - Kinghorn, A. Douglas
PY - 2005/9
Y1 - 2005/9
N2 - As part of an ongoing collaborative effort to discover pew anticancer agents from plants, an extract obtained from the leaves and twigs of Avicennia germinans, collected in a coastal area of southern Florida, was identified as possessing cytotoxic activity in a panel of human cancer cell lines. Fractionation of the petroleum ether partition, using cytotoxicity to guide the fractionation, led to the isolation of 3-chlorodeoxylapachol. The antitumour potential of 3-chlorodeoxylapachol was demonstrated with the in-vivo hollow fibre assay, a model of antitumour activity using human cancer cell-filled fibres implanted into mice. The possibility that this compound is an artefact of the isolation procedure was ruled out by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis of extracts prepared without the use of chlorinated solvent. In conclusion, 3-chlordeoxylapachol, a secondary metabolite obtained from the chloroform-soluble extract of a mangrove tree, was cytotoxic in a panel of human cancer cells, and active against KB human cancer cells in the murine hollow fibre antitumour model, with selectivity in KB cells for the intravenous site at lower doses, indicating possible metabolic activation.
AB - As part of an ongoing collaborative effort to discover pew anticancer agents from plants, an extract obtained from the leaves and twigs of Avicennia germinans, collected in a coastal area of southern Florida, was identified as possessing cytotoxic activity in a panel of human cancer cell lines. Fractionation of the petroleum ether partition, using cytotoxicity to guide the fractionation, led to the isolation of 3-chlorodeoxylapachol. The antitumour potential of 3-chlorodeoxylapachol was demonstrated with the in-vivo hollow fibre assay, a model of antitumour activity using human cancer cell-filled fibres implanted into mice. The possibility that this compound is an artefact of the isolation procedure was ruled out by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis of extracts prepared without the use of chlorinated solvent. In conclusion, 3-chlordeoxylapachol, a secondary metabolite obtained from the chloroform-soluble extract of a mangrove tree, was cytotoxic in a panel of human cancer cells, and active against KB human cancer cells in the murine hollow fibre antitumour model, with selectivity in KB cells for the intravenous site at lower doses, indicating possible metabolic activation.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=25844526511&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1211/jpp.57.9.0005
DO - 10.1211/jpp.57.9.0005
M3 - Article
C2 - 16105231
AN - SCOPUS:25844526511
SN - 0022-3573
VL - 57
SP - 1101
EP - 1108
JO - Journal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology
JF - Journal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology
IS - 9
ER -