4.3 Article

A novel synthetic derivative of quercetin, 8-trifluoromethyl-3,5,7,3′,4′-O-pentamethyl-quercetin, inhibits bladder cancer growth by targeting the AMPK/mTOR signaling pathway

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 8, Issue 42, Pages 71657-71671

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.17799

Keywords

8-Trifluoromethyl-3,5,7,3 ',4 '-O-pentamethyl-quercetin; quercetin; derivative of quercetin; AMPK; mTOR

Funding

  1. Open Fund of National Laboratory of Subtropical Agriculture Ecology Process, Chinese Academy of Sciences [ISA2016204]
  2. Advanced Fund of Hunan Provincial Education Department [15A117]
  3. Hunan Natural Science Foundation [2016JJ2187]
  4. Key Project of Hunan Province [2016JC2036]
  5. National Key RD Program [2016YFD0501201]
  6. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31400311]
  7. Program for Excellent Talents of Hunan Normal University [ET1508]

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Quercetin is a naturally existing compound and shows attractive anticancer properties for a variety of solid tumors including glioma, bladder cancer, hepatocellular carcinoma, breast cancer, hematological malignancies and prostate carcinoma. However, these anticancer properties have not been clinically approved due to unclear mechanistic information and its low bioactivity. In our previous study, we elucidated that quercetin activates AMPK pathway which is the major mechanism for its unique anticancer effect in bladder cancer. In the present study, we are trying to enhance its bioactivity by chemical modification using fluorination approach to prepare novel chemical entities, based on the principle of intermediate derivative method (IDM). The compound we obtained is named 8-trifluoromethyl-3,5,7,3', 4'-O- pentamethyl-quercetin (TFQ), characterized by NMR spectra and mass spectrum (MS). The results from MTT and cologenic assay in two human and one murine bladder cancer cell lines showed that TFQ exhibits more potent inhibition on the three bladder cancer cell lines than quercetin (Que) although this enhanced effects is not very dramatic. Furthermore, we found that the survival of normal bladder cells PEBC was not significantly suppressed by TFQ compared with Que. Western blot analysis showed that TFQ possess more potent AMPK activation than Que. The downstream of AMPK was further examined by western blot. TFQ treatment is able to inactivate mTOR signaling pathway with the regulation of mTOR, 4EBP1 and P70S6K. These results demonstrated that the fluorinated quercetin derivative TFQ inhibits bladder cancer cell growth through the AMPK/mTOR pathway. Altogether, our findings suggest that TFQ could serve as a new potential therapeutic agent for bladder cancer more effective than Que.

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