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Secondary Metabolites from the Culture of the Marine-derived Fungus <i>Paradendryphiella salina</i> PC 362H and Evaluation of the Anticancer Activity of Its Metabolite Hyalodendrin
oleh: Ambre Dezaire, Christophe H. Marchand, Marine Vallet, Nathalie Ferrand, Soraya Chaouch, Elisabeth Mouray, Annette K. Larsen, Michèle Sabbah, Stéphane D. Lemaire, Soizic Prado, Alexandre E. Escargueil
Format: | Article |
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Diterbitkan: | MDPI AG 2020-04-01 |
Deskripsi
High-throughput screening assays have been designed to identify compounds capable of inhibiting phenotypes involved in cancer aggressiveness. However, most studies used commercially available chemical libraries. This prompted us to explore natural products isolated from marine-derived fungi as a new source of molecules. In this study, we established a chemical library from 99 strains corresponding to 45 molecular operational taxonomic units and evaluated their anticancer activity against the MCF7 epithelial cancer cell line and its invasive stem cell-like MCF7-Sh-WISP2 counterpart. We identified the marine fungal <i>Paradendryphiella salina</i> PC 362H strain, isolated from the brown alga <i>Pelvetia caniculata</i> (PC), as one of the most promising fungi which produce active compounds. Further chemical and biological characterizations of the culture of the <i>Paradendryphiella salina</i> PC 362H strain identified (-)-hyalodendrin as the active secondary metabolite responsible for the cytotoxic activity of the crude extract. The antitumor activity of (-)-hyalodendrin was not only limited to the MCF7 cell lines, but also prominent on cancer cells with invasive phenotypes including colorectal cancer cells resistant to chemotherapy. Further investigations showed that treatment of MCF7-Sh-WISP2 cells with (-)-hyalodendrin induced changes in the phosphorylation status of p53 and altered expression of HSP60, HSP70 and PRAS40 proteins. Altogether, our study reveals that this uninvestigated marine fungal crude extract possesses a strong therapeutic potential against tumor cells with aggressive phenotypes and confirms that members of the epidithiodioxopiperazines are interesting fungal toxins with anticancer activities.