Inhibitory effects of myricetin on mammalian DNA polymerase, topoisomerase and human cancer cell proliferation.
Food chemistry (2013), Volume 139, Page 910
Abstract:
In this study, the inhibitory activities against mammalian DNA polymerases (pols) of 16 major bioflavonoids were investigated. Myricetin (3,3',4',5,5',7-hexahydroxyflavone) was the most potent inhibitor of pols amongst the compounds tested, with IC50 values of 21.3-40.9μM. This compound did not affect the activities of plant (cauliflower) pol α or prokaryotic pols. Myricetin also inhibited human DNA topoisomerase II (topo II) activity with an IC50 value of 27.5μM, but did not inhibit the activities of other DNA metabolic enzymes tested. Myricetin also did not influence the direct binding to double stranded DNA as determined by thermal transition analysis. It was found to prevent the proliferation of human colon HCT116 carcinoma cells with an LD50 of 28.2μM, halt the cell cycle in G2/M phase, and induce apoptosis. These results suggest that the decrease of proliferation may be a result of the inhibition of cellular topoisomerase (topo) II rather than pols.
Polymerases:
Topics:
Modulators/Inhibitors
Status:
new | topics/pols set | partial results | complete | validated |
Results:
No results available for this paper.