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1.
Clin Exp Pharmacol Physiol ; 48(2): 227-237, 2021 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33124084

ABSTRACT

Gossypol is a natural polyphenol presently considered as a promising biological phytochemical with a range of activities including anticancer. We examined volume regulation-dependent effects of gossypol using erythrocytes and thymic lymphocytes. Gossypol effectively lysed human red blood cells (RBC) with a half-maximal concentration of 67.4 ± 1.6 µmol/L and in a non-colloid osmotic manner. Sublytic gossypol doses of 1-10 µmol/L significantly protected RBC from osmotic hemolysis, but potentiated their sensitivity to the colloid-osmotic lysis induced by a pore-former nystatin. When added to the thymocytes suspension, gossypol caused a strong depression of the ability of cells to restore their volume under hypoosmotic stress with a half-maximal activity at 2.1 ± 0.3 µmol/L. Gossypol suppressed regulatory volume decrease under experimental conditions, when cationic permeability was controlled by gramicidin D, and volume recovery depended mainly on anionic conductance, suggesting that the polyphenol inhibits the swelling-induced anion permeability. In direct patch-clamp experiments, gossypol inhibited the volume-sensitive outwardly rectifying (VSOR) chloride channel in thymocytes and in human HCT116 and HeLa cells, possibly by a mechanism when gossypol molecule with a radius close to the size of channel pore plugs into the narrowest portion of the native VSOR chloride channel. Micromolar gossypol suppressed proliferation of thymocytes, HCT116 and HeLa cells. VSOR blockage may represent new mechanism of anticancer activity of gossypol in addition to its action as a BH3-mimetic.


Subject(s)
Thymocytes , Chloride Channels , Gossypol , HeLa Cells , Humans , Permeability
2.
Pharmacol Rep ; 71(6): 1079-1087, 2019 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31629088

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Cell volume regulation and volume-regulated anion channels are critical for cell survival in non-isosmotic conditions, and dysregulation of this system is detrimental. Although genes and proteins underlying this basic cellular machinery were recently identified, the pharmacology remains poorly explored. METHODS: We examined effects of 16 flavonoids on the regulatory volume decrease (RVD) of thymocytes under hypoosmotic stress assessed by light transmittance and on the activity of volume-sensitive chloride channel by patch-clamp technique. RESULTS: Comparison of effects of flavonoids on RVD revealed a group of four active substances with lehmannin being the strongest inhibitor (IC50 = 8.8 µM). Structure-functional comparison suggested that hydrophobicity brought about by methoxy, prenyl or lavandulyl groups as well as by the absence of glucosyl fragment together with localization of the phenyl ring B at the position C2 (which is at C3 in totally inactive isoflavones) are important structural determinants for the flavonoids activity as volume regulation inhibitors. All active flavonoids suppressed RVD under Gramicidin D-NMDG hypotonic stress conditions when cationic permeability was increased by an ionophore, gramicidin D, with all extracellular monovalent cations replaced with bulky NMDG+ suggesting that they target volume-sensitive anionic permeability. While effects of hispidulin and pulicarin were only partial, lehmannin and pinocembrin completely abolished RVD under Gramicidin D-NMDG conditions. In direct patch-clamp experiments, lehmannin and pinocembrin produced a strong inhibiting effect on the swelling-induced whole-cell chloride conductance in a voltage-independent manner. CONCLUSION: Lehmannin, pinocembrin, and possibly hispidulin and pulicarin may serve as leads for developing effective low-toxic immunomodulators.


Subject(s)
Chloride Channels/physiology , Flavonoids/pharmacology , Osmotic Pressure/drug effects , Thymocytes/physiology , Alkaloids/pharmacology , Animals , Cell Size/drug effects , Flavanones/pharmacology , Flavonoids/chemistry , Gramicidin , Patch-Clamp Techniques , Quinolizidines/pharmacology , Rats , Thymocytes/drug effects , Thymocytes/metabolism
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