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Nicolaioidesin C: An Antiausterity Agent Shows Promising Antitumor Activity in a Pancreatic Cancer Xenograft Mouse Model.

Nguyen Duy PhanAshraf M OmarIkue TakahashiHayato BabaTomoyuki OkumuraJohji ImuraTakuya OkadaNaoki ToyookaTsutomu FujiiSuresh Awale
Published in: Journal of natural products (2023)
Human pancreatic tumors are hypovascular in nature, and their tumor microenvironment is often characterized by hypoxia and severe nutrient deprivation due to uncontrolled heterogeneous growth, a phenomenon known as "austerity". However, pancreatic tumor cells have the inherent ability to adapt and thrive even in such low nutrient and hypoxic microenvironments. Anticancer drugs such as gemcitabine and paclitaxel, which target rapidly proliferating cells, are often ineffective against nutrient-deprived pancreatic cancer cells. In order to overcome this limitation, the search for novel agents that can eliminate cancer cells' adaptations to nutrition starvation, also known as "antiausterity" agents, represents a promising strategy to make the cancer cells susceptible to treatment. The natural product (+)-nicolaioidesin C (Nic-C) was found to have potent antiausterity activity against the PANC-1 human pancreatic cancer cell line in a nutrient-deprived condition. However, its efficacy in vivo remained untested. To address this, we synthesized Nic-C in its racemic form and evaluated its antitumor potential in a human pancreatic cancer xenograft model. Nic-C inhibited pancreatic cancer cell migration and colony formation and significantly inhibited tumor growth in MIA PaCa-2 xenografts in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, Nic-C inhibited the Akt/mTOR and autophagy signaling pathways in both in vitro and in vivo studies. Metabolomic profiling of in vivo tumor samples suggests that Nic-C downregulates amino acid metabolism while upregulating sphingolipid metabolism.
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