A network pharmacology approach to investigate dehydrocostus lactone inhibits the proliferation and epithelial-mesenchymal transition of human gastric cancer cells via regulating the PI3K/Akt and extracellular signal-regulated kinases/mitogen-activated protein kinase signalling pathways

J Pharm Pharmacol. 2023 Oct 5;75(10):1344-1356. doi: 10.1093/jpp/rgad065.

Abstract

Objectives: Dehydrocostus lactone (DHE), a sesquiterpene lactone, has been proven the significant inhibition of multiple cancer cells. However, there are limited reports on the activity of DHE in gastric cancer (GC). In this research, Network pharmacology predicted the anti-GC mechanism of DHE, and the prediction was verified by in-vitro experiments.

Methods: Network pharmacology confirmed the major effect signalling pathway of DHE in treating GC. Cell viability assay, colony formation assay, wound healing assay, cell migration and invasion assay, apoptosis assay, western blot and real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction verified the mechanism of DHE in GC cell lines.

Key findings: The results showed that DHE inhibited the growth and metastasis of MGC803 and AGS GC cells. Mechanistically, the analysis results indicated that DHE significantly induced the apoptosis process by suppressing the PI3K/protein kinase B (Akt) signalling pathway, and inhibited epithelial-mesenchymal transition by suppressing the extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERK)/MAPK signalling pathway. The Akt activator (SC79) inhibited DHE induced apoptosis, and DHE had similar effects with the ERK inhibitor (FR180204).

Conclusions: All results suggested that DHE was a potential natural chemotherapeutic drug in GC treatment.

Keywords: apoptosis; dehydrocostus lactone; epithelial-mesenchymal transition; gastric cancer; network pharmacology.