Steroidal Cardiac Na+/K+ ATPase Inhibitors Exhibit Strong Anti-Cancer Potential in vitro and in Prostate and Lung Cancer Xenografts in vivo
- Authors: Dimas K.1, Papadopoulou N.2, Baskakis C.3, Prousis K.4, Tsakos M.5, Alkahtani S.6, Honisch S.7, Lang F.8, Calogeropoulou T.9, Alevizopoulos K.10, Stournaras C.11
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Affiliations:
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- Issue: Vol 14, No 5 (2014)
- Pages: 762-770
- Section: Oncology
- URL: https://filvestnik.nvsu.ru/1871-5206/article/view/695092
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.2174/18715206113136660338
- ID: 695092
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Abstract
Sodium potassium pump (Na+/K+ATPase) is a validated pharmacological target for the treatment of congestive heart failure. Recent data with inotropic drugs such as digoxin & digitoxin (digitalis) suggest a potent anti-cancer action of these drugs and promote Na+/K+ATPase as a novel therapeutic target in cancer. However, digitalis have narrow therapeutic indices, are pro-arrhythmic and are considered non-developable drugs by the pharmaceutical industry. On the contrary, a series of recently-developed steroidal inhibitors showed better pharmacological properties and clinical activities in cardiac patients. Their anti-cancer activity however, remained unknown. In this study, we synthesized seventeen steroidal cardiac inhibitors and explored for the first time their anti-cancer activity in vitro and in vivo. Our results indicate potent anti-cancer actions of steroidal cardiac inhibitors in multiple cell lines from different tumor panels including multi-drug resistant cells. Furthermore, the most potent compound identified in our studies, the 3-[(R)-3- pyrrolidinyl]oxime derivative 3, showed outstanding potencies (as measured by GI50, TGI and LC50 values) in most cells in vitro, was selectively cytotoxic in cancer versus normal cells showing a therapeutic index of 31.7 and exhibited significant tumor growth inhibition in prostate and lung xenografts in vivo. Collectively, our results suggest that previously described cardiac Na+/K+ATPase inhibitors have potent anti-cancer actions and may thus constitute strong re-purposing candidates for further cancer drug development.
About the authors
Konstantinos Dimas
aff1
Email: info@benthamscience.net
Natalia Papadopoulou
aff2
Email: info@benthamscience.net
Constantinos Baskakis
aff3
Email: info@benthamscience.net
Kyriakos Prousis
aff4
Email: info@benthamscience.net
Michail Tsakos
aff5
Email: info@benthamscience.net
Saad Alkahtani
aff6
Email: info@benthamscience.net
Sabina Honisch
aff7
Email: info@benthamscience.net
Florian Lang
aff8
Email: info@benthamscience.net
Theodora Calogeropoulou
aff9
Email: info@benthamscience.net
Konstantinos Alevizopoulos
aff10
Email: info@benthamscience.net
Christos Stournaras
aff11
Email: info@benthamscience.net
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