Rhizochalin [(2
R,3
R,26
R,27
R)-2,27-diamino-3-hydroxy-26-[(2
R,3
R,4
S,6
R)-3,4,5-trihydroxy-6-(hydroxymethyl)tetrahydro-2
H-pyran-2-yloxy]octacosan-11-one], an antimicrobial and cytotoxic marine two-headed sphingolipid-like natural product, isolated
from the sponge
Rhizochalina incrustata, and some related compounds were studied as anticarcinogenic and proapoptotic agents. The corresponding effects were tested
on the mouse skin epidermal JB6 P
+ Cl 41 cell line, its stable transfectants, THP-1, HeLa, and SNU-C4 human tumor cells using a variety of assessments, including
cell viability (MTS), flow cytometry, anchorage-independent soft agar, and luciferase assays. At 5–10 μM concentrations, rhizochalin
was effective as an inhibitor of the malignant transformation of JB6 P
+ Cl 41 cells or colony formation of human tumor cells, which exerted its action, at least in part, through the induction of
p53-dependent apoptosis. Structure–activity relationship study showed aglycon of rhizochalin to be the most active while peracetylated
aglycon was the least active among the compounds studied.
Keywords Marine two-headed sphingolipid-like compound - Anticarcinogenic properties - Tumor cells - p53-dependent apoptosis