Discovery of potential targets of Triptolide through inverse docking in ovarian cancer cells

Triptolide (TPL) is proposed as an effective anticancer agent known for its anti-proliferation of a variety of cancer cells including ovarian cancer cells. Although some studies have been conducted, the mechanism by which TPL acts on ovarian cancer remains to be clearly described. Herein, systematic...

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Main Authors: Qinhang Wu, Gang Bao, Yang Pan, Xiaoqi Qian, Furong Gao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2020-03-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/8620.pdf
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spelling doaj-7aec6090fed44bffad742f4f4d39b99d2020-11-25T02:17:51ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592020-03-018e862010.7717/peerj.8620Discovery of potential targets of Triptolide through inverse docking in ovarian cancer cellsQinhang WuGang BaoYang PanXiaoqi QianFurong GaoTriptolide (TPL) is proposed as an effective anticancer agent known for its anti-proliferation of a variety of cancer cells including ovarian cancer cells. Although some studies have been conducted, the mechanism by which TPL acts on ovarian cancer remains to be clearly described. Herein, systematic work based on bioinformatics was carried out to discover the potential targets of TPL in SKOV-3 cells. TPL induces the early apoptosis of SKOV-3 cells in a dose- and time-dependent manner with an IC50 = 40 ± 0.89 nM when cells are incubated for 48 h. Moreover, 20 nM TPL significantly promotes early apoptosis at a rate of 40.73%. Using a self-designed inverse molecular docking protocol, we fish the top 19 probable targets of TPL from the target library, which was built on 2,250 proteins extracted from the Protein Data Bank. The 2D-DIGE assay reveals that the expression of eight genes is affected by TPL. The results of western blotting and qRT-PCR assay suggest that 40 nM of TPL up-regulates the level of Annexin A5 (6.34 ± 0.07 fold) and ATP syn thase (4.08 ± 0.08 fold) and down-regulates the level of β-Tubulin (0.11 ± 0.12 fold) and HSP90 (0.21 ± 0.09 fold). More details of TPL affecting on Annexin A5 signaling pathway will be discovered in the future. Our results define some potential targets of TPL, with the hope that this agent could be used as therapy for the preclinical treatment of ovarian cancer.https://peerj.com/articles/8620.pdfOvarian cancerSKOV-3 cellTriptolideInverse dockingPotential targets
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Qinhang Wu
Gang Bao
Yang Pan
Xiaoqi Qian
Furong Gao
spellingShingle Qinhang Wu
Gang Bao
Yang Pan
Xiaoqi Qian
Furong Gao
Discovery of potential targets of Triptolide through inverse docking in ovarian cancer cells
PeerJ
Ovarian cancer
SKOV-3 cell
Triptolide
Inverse docking
Potential targets
author_facet Qinhang Wu
Gang Bao
Yang Pan
Xiaoqi Qian
Furong Gao
author_sort Qinhang Wu
title Discovery of potential targets of Triptolide through inverse docking in ovarian cancer cells
title_short Discovery of potential targets of Triptolide through inverse docking in ovarian cancer cells
title_full Discovery of potential targets of Triptolide through inverse docking in ovarian cancer cells
title_fullStr Discovery of potential targets of Triptolide through inverse docking in ovarian cancer cells
title_full_unstemmed Discovery of potential targets of Triptolide through inverse docking in ovarian cancer cells
title_sort discovery of potential targets of triptolide through inverse docking in ovarian cancer cells
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Triptolide (TPL) is proposed as an effective anticancer agent known for its anti-proliferation of a variety of cancer cells including ovarian cancer cells. Although some studies have been conducted, the mechanism by which TPL acts on ovarian cancer remains to be clearly described. Herein, systematic work based on bioinformatics was carried out to discover the potential targets of TPL in SKOV-3 cells. TPL induces the early apoptosis of SKOV-3 cells in a dose- and time-dependent manner with an IC50 = 40 ± 0.89 nM when cells are incubated for 48 h. Moreover, 20 nM TPL significantly promotes early apoptosis at a rate of 40.73%. Using a self-designed inverse molecular docking protocol, we fish the top 19 probable targets of TPL from the target library, which was built on 2,250 proteins extracted from the Protein Data Bank. The 2D-DIGE assay reveals that the expression of eight genes is affected by TPL. The results of western blotting and qRT-PCR assay suggest that 40 nM of TPL up-regulates the level of Annexin A5 (6.34 ± 0.07 fold) and ATP syn thase (4.08 ± 0.08 fold) and down-regulates the level of β-Tubulin (0.11 ± 0.12 fold) and HSP90 (0.21 ± 0.09 fold). More details of TPL affecting on Annexin A5 signaling pathway will be discovered in the future. Our results define some potential targets of TPL, with the hope that this agent could be used as therapy for the preclinical treatment of ovarian cancer.
topic Ovarian cancer
SKOV-3 cell
Triptolide
Inverse docking
Potential targets
url https://peerj.com/articles/8620.pdf
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AT gangbao discoveryofpotentialtargetsoftriptolidethroughinversedockinginovariancancercells
AT yangpan discoveryofpotentialtargetsoftriptolidethroughinversedockinginovariancancercells
AT xiaoqiqian discoveryofpotentialtargetsoftriptolidethroughinversedockinginovariancancercells
AT furonggao discoveryofpotentialtargetsoftriptolidethroughinversedockinginovariancancercells
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