Repurposing of ginseng extract as topoisomerase I inhibitor based on the comparative analysis of gene expression patterns

Publication date: August 2019Source: Phytochemistry, Volume 164Author(s): Mi Ran Byun, Cheol Hyun Kim, Ho Sub Lee, Jin Woo Choi, Sang Kwan LeeAbstractRepositioning of plant extracts and chemical drugs can accelerate drug development. However, its success rate may depend on what the clue is for the repositioning. Recently, repositioning based on correction of unwarranted gene expression pattern has suggested the possibility of new drug development. Here, we designed a similar method for the repositioning of nutraceutical ginseng (Panax ginseng C.A.Mey.), which is one of the most validated natural therapeutic products for various diseases. We analyzed ginseng-induced gene expression profiles using the connectivity map algorithm, which is a database that connects diseases, chemical drugs, and gene expression. Ginseng was predicted to show the same effects as those of topoisomerase I inhibitors. In a subsequent in vitro assay, ginseng extract unwound coiled or supercoiled DNA, an effect comparable to that of the topoisomerase I inhibitor, camptothecin. Furthermore, ginseng extract induced synthetic lethality with suppression of the Werner syndrome gene. The collected data implicate ginseng as a candidate antitumor agent owing to its topoisomerase I inhibitory activity and further validate the usefulness of differentially expressed gene similarity-based repurposing of other natural products.Graphical abstract- Gene expression patterns between ginseng and other chemical drugs was ...
Source: Phytochemistry - Category: Chemistry Source Type: research