Many scientific studies have shown that plants are excellent
source of useful bioactive substances. Sufficient proof of the healing
properties of plants utilized in conventional medicine systems around the world
can be found in scientific research. Lignans are the significant class of plant
bioactive compounds from the pharmaceutical perspective and these are reported
as folk medications in traditional medicines of China and Japan.
Podophyllotoxin is one of the most well-known aryltetralin lignan due to its
effectiveness in combating cancer. It is found in the Podophyllum plant species
like P. hexandrum and P. peltatum rhizomes. Although podophyllotoxin is a
strong antimitotic drug itself, it is too toxic for the human cancer therapy.
Etoposide, teniposide, and etopophos the therapeutically significant anticancer
drugs, are the semisynthetic derivatives of podophyllotoxin. These drugs have
been used to cure many types of cancers, including lung, breast and testicular
cancer. However, toxicity to the body, resistance to drugs and low absorption
greatly restricted the use of these compounds in clinical therapy. However, in
recent decades, substantial chemical modification and pharmacological research
have been focused on the derivatives of podophyllotoxin to overcome these
challenges and there is continuous search for more potent podophyllotoxin
derivatives to treat a variety of malignancies. Thus our book chapter is
focused on the importance of podophyllotoxin and its mode of action for cancer.
Podophyllotoxin is found in Podophyllum plant species in rich amount but to
maintain the ecological balance the commercially available podophyllotoxin is
used for the chemical synthesis of its derivatives. We further discussed about
about five well known derivatives of podophyllotoxin i.e. etoposide,
teniposide, TOP 53, GL331 and NK611. The structures of podophyllotoxin and
these derivatives are described along with their mechanisms of action. Very
recent examples from 2021 onwards on the synthesis of C-4 and C-5 podophyllotoxin
derivatives containing ester, piperazinyl-cinnamic amide moieties from
podophyllotoxin are covered along with their anticancer potential.
Author(s) Details:
Abha Chaudhary,
Department of Chemistry, Govt. P. G. College, Ambala Cantt, India.
Deepak
Sharma,
Department
of Chemistry, Govt. P. G. College, Ambala Cantt, India.
Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/RDSTSF/article/view/13385
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