Litcius/Paper detail

Wogonin, as a potent anticancer compound: From chemistry to cellular interactions

Hardeep Singh Tuli, Prangya Rath, Abhishek Chauhan, Gaurav Parashar, Nidarshana Chaturvedi Parashar, Hemant Joshi, Isha Rani, Seema Ramniwas, Diwakar Aggarwal, Manoj Kumar, Rashmi Rana

2023Experimental Biology and Medicine30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Chinese native medicine Scutellaria baicalensis Georgi, also referred to as Chinese skullcap or Huang-Qin, is frequently used to treat cancer, viral infections, and seizures. This plant’s abundance of flavones (wogonoside) and their related aglycones (wogonin) is responsible for many of its pharmacologic effects. A significant ingredient in S. baicalensis that has been the subject of the most research is wogonin. Numerous preclinical investigations revealed that wogonin suppresses tumor growth by cell cycle arrest, stimulating cell death and preventing metastasis. This review focuses on a complete overview of published reports that suggest chemopreventive action of wogonin and the mechanistic insights behind these neoplastic activities. It also emphasizes the synergistic improvements made by wogonin in chemoprevention. The factual data in this mini-review stimulate additional research on chemistry and toxicological profile of wogonin to confirm its safety issues. This review will encourage researchers to generalize the merits of wogonin to be used as potential compound for cancer treatment.

Topics & Concepts

WogoninScutellaria baicalensisFlavonesPharmacologyBaicalinTraditional medicineMedicineChemistryTraditional Chinese medicineAlternative medicinePathologyChromatographyHigh-performance liquid chromatographyFlavonoids in Medical ResearchPhytochemistry and Biological ActivitiesNatural product bioactivities and synthesis
Wogonin, as a potent anticancer compound: From chemistry to cellular interactions | Litcius