Anticancer Drugs from Traditional Toxic Chinese Medicines |
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Authors: | Shuli Man Wenyuan Gao Changlong Wei Changxiao Liu |
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Affiliation: | 1. Key Laboratory of Industrial Fermentation Microbiology, (Tianjin University of Science and Technology), Ministry of Education, , Tianjin, 300457 PR China;2. Tianjin Key Laboratory of Industrial Microbiology, Tianjin University of Science and Technology, , Tianjin, 300457 PR China;3. School of Pharmaceutical Science and Technology, Tianjin University, , Tianjin, 300072 China;4. The State Key Laboratories of Pharmacodynamics and Pharmacokinetics, , Tianjin, China |
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Abstract: | Many anticancer drugs are obtained from natural sources. Nature produces a variety of toxic compounds, which are often used as anticancer drugs. Up to now, there are at least 120 species of poisonous botanicals, animals and minerals, of which more than half have been found to possess significant anticancer properties. In spite of their clinical toxicity, they exhibit pharmacological effects and have been used as important traditional Chinese medicines for the different stages of cancer. The article reviews many structures such as alkaloids of Camptotheca acuminata, Catharanthus roseus and Cephalotaxus fortunei, lignans of Dysosma versipellis and Podophyllum emodi, ketones of Garcinia hanburyi, terpenoids of Mylabris and Ginkgo biloba, diterpenoids of Tripterygium wilfordii, Euphorbia fischeriana, Euphorbia lathyris, Euphorbia kansui, Daphne genkwa, Pseudolarix kaempferi and Brucea javanica, triterpenoids of Melia toosendan, steroids of Periploca sepium, Paris polyphylla and Venenum Bufonis, and arsenic compounds including Arsenicum and Realgar. By comparing their related phytochemistry, toxic effects and the recent advances in understanding the mechanisms of action, this review puts forward some ideals and examples about how to increase antitumour activity and/or reduce the side effects experienced with Chinese medicine. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |
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Keywords: | traditional toxic Chinese medicine anticancer arsenic trioxide phytochemistry mechanism toxic effects |
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