Isolation of a natural product with anti-mitotic activity from a toxic Canadian prairie plant

We are investigating plants from the prairie ecological zone of Canada to identify natural products that inhibit mitosis in cancer cells. Investigation of plant parts from the Canadian plant species Hymenoxys richardsonii (Asteraceae) revealed that leaf extracts (PP-360A) had anti-mitotic activity o...

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Main Authors: Layla Molina, David E. Williams, Raymond J. Andersen, Roy M. Golsteyn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-05-01
Series:Heliyon
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021012342
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spelling doaj-43ccbaf7438e46dbb48efb87b12c74012021-06-03T14:45:43ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402021-05-0175e07131Isolation of a natural product with anti-mitotic activity from a toxic Canadian prairie plantLayla Molina0David E. Williams1Raymond J. Andersen2Roy M. Golsteyn3Natural Product and Cancer Cell Laboratories, University of Lethbridge, Lethbridge, AB, T1K 3M4 CanadaDepartment of Earth, Ocean, Atmospheric Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z4 CanadaDepartment of Earth, Ocean, Atmospheric Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z4 CanadaNatural Product and Cancer Cell Laboratories, University of Lethbridge, Lethbridge, AB, T1K 3M4 Canada; Corresponding author.We are investigating plants from the prairie ecological zone of Canada to identify natural products that inhibit mitosis in cancer cells. Investigation of plant parts from the Canadian plant species Hymenoxys richardsonii (Asteraceae) revealed that leaf extracts (PP-360A) had anti-mitotic activity on human cancer cell lines. Cells treated with leaf extracts acquired a rounded morphology, similar to that of cells in mitosis. We demonstrated that the rounded cells contained mitotic spindles and phospho-histone H3 using the techniques of immunofluorescence microscopy. By biology-guided fractionation of H. richardsonii leaves, we isolated a sesquiterpene lactone named hymenoratin, which had not been previously assigned a biological activity. Cells treated with hymenoratin have phospho-histone H3 positive chromosomes, a mitotic spindle, and enter a prolonged mitotic arrest in which the spindles become distorted. By Western blot analysis, hymenoratin treated cells acquire high levels of cyclin B and dephosphorylated Cdk1. There is a growing body of evidence that select members of the sesquiterpene lactone chemical family have anti-mitotic activity.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021012342AsteraceaeCdk1Hymenoxys richardsoniiHymenoratinMitotic spindleMitosis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Layla Molina
David E. Williams
Raymond J. Andersen
Roy M. Golsteyn
spellingShingle Layla Molina
David E. Williams
Raymond J. Andersen
Roy M. Golsteyn
Isolation of a natural product with anti-mitotic activity from a toxic Canadian prairie plant
Heliyon
Asteraceae
Cdk1
Hymenoxys richardsonii
Hymenoratin
Mitotic spindle
Mitosis
author_facet Layla Molina
David E. Williams
Raymond J. Andersen
Roy M. Golsteyn
author_sort Layla Molina
title Isolation of a natural product with anti-mitotic activity from a toxic Canadian prairie plant
title_short Isolation of a natural product with anti-mitotic activity from a toxic Canadian prairie plant
title_full Isolation of a natural product with anti-mitotic activity from a toxic Canadian prairie plant
title_fullStr Isolation of a natural product with anti-mitotic activity from a toxic Canadian prairie plant
title_full_unstemmed Isolation of a natural product with anti-mitotic activity from a toxic Canadian prairie plant
title_sort isolation of a natural product with anti-mitotic activity from a toxic canadian prairie plant
publisher Elsevier
series Heliyon
issn 2405-8440
publishDate 2021-05-01
description We are investigating plants from the prairie ecological zone of Canada to identify natural products that inhibit mitosis in cancer cells. Investigation of plant parts from the Canadian plant species Hymenoxys richardsonii (Asteraceae) revealed that leaf extracts (PP-360A) had anti-mitotic activity on human cancer cell lines. Cells treated with leaf extracts acquired a rounded morphology, similar to that of cells in mitosis. We demonstrated that the rounded cells contained mitotic spindles and phospho-histone H3 using the techniques of immunofluorescence microscopy. By biology-guided fractionation of H. richardsonii leaves, we isolated a sesquiterpene lactone named hymenoratin, which had not been previously assigned a biological activity. Cells treated with hymenoratin have phospho-histone H3 positive chromosomes, a mitotic spindle, and enter a prolonged mitotic arrest in which the spindles become distorted. By Western blot analysis, hymenoratin treated cells acquire high levels of cyclin B and dephosphorylated Cdk1. There is a growing body of evidence that select members of the sesquiterpene lactone chemical family have anti-mitotic activity.
topic Asteraceae
Cdk1
Hymenoxys richardsonii
Hymenoratin
Mitotic spindle
Mitosis
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021012342
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AT davidewilliams isolationofanaturalproductwithantimitoticactivityfromatoxiccanadianprairieplant
AT raymondjandersen isolationofanaturalproductwithantimitoticactivityfromatoxiccanadianprairieplant
AT roymgolsteyn isolationofanaturalproductwithantimitoticactivityfromatoxiccanadianprairieplant
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