Frontiers in Pharmacology (Mar 2023)

Platycodin-D exerts its anti-cancer effect by promoting c-Myc protein ubiquitination and degradation in gastric cancer

  • Qianqian Xu,
  • Qianqian Xu,
  • Guangzhao Pan,
  • Guangzhao Pan,
  • Zhonglan Wang,
  • Zhonglan Wang,
  • Lingling Wang,
  • Lingling Wang,
  • Yancheng Tang,
  • Jinyun Dong,
  • Jinyun Dong,
  • Jiang-Jiang Qin,
  • Jiang-Jiang Qin,
  • Jiang-Jiang Qin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2023.1138658
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Platycodin D (PD) is a triterpene saponin extracted from the root of Platycodon grandiflorum. It has been reported to exhibit multiple pharmacological and biological properties. There is substantial evidence to support that PD displays a wide range of anti-tumor activities. However, the detailed molecular mechanism still needs further elaboration. In the present study, to explore whether PD inhibits gastric cancer (GC) cell viability, eight GC cell lines and the GES-1 cell line (a gastric mucosal cell line) were tested. We found that PD exhibited better inhibitory activity on GC cell lines than on the non-tumor cell line. Besides, treatment with PD led to a significant cell cycle arrest, thereby causing subsequent apoptosis. Regarding the cell growth inhibition mechanism, PD can downregulate the protein level of c-Myc rather than its mRNA level in a dose-dependent manner. Further studies revealed that PD disturbed the overall ubiquitination level in GC cell lines and enhanced the ubiquitination-dependent degradation of c-Myc. Interestingly, the inhibition of cell viability by PD could be restored to a certain extent when the expression of c-Myc was recovered, suggesting that PD-mediated GC cell growth inhibition is closely associated with c-Myc expression. Our study proposes a novel molecular mechanism for PD inhibiting GC cell proliferation and growth by destabilizing the c-Myc protein. This work may lay a preliminary foundation for developing PD as an anti-cancer therapy.

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