Isolation of a natural product with anti-mitotic activity from a toxic Canadian prairie plant
Layla Molina, David E. Williams, Raymond J. Andersen, Roy M. Golsteyn
Abstract
leaves, we isolated a sesquiterpene lactone named hymenoratin, which had not been previously assigned a biological activity. Cells treated with hymenoratin have phospho-histone H3 positive chromosomes, a mitotic spindle, and enter a prolonged mitotic arrest in which the spindles become distorted. By Western blot analysis, hymenoratin treated cells acquire high levels of cyclin B and dephosphorylated Cdk1. There is a growing body of evidence that select members of the sesquiterpene lactone chemical family have anti-mitotic activity.
Topics & Concepts
MitosisBiologySesquiterpene lactoneBotanyCell biologySesquiterpeneSesquiterpenes and Asteraceae StudiesPlant Toxicity and Pharmacological PropertiesNatural product bioactivities and synthesis