digitoxin has been researched along with convallatoxin* in 3 studies
3 other study(ies) available for digitoxin and convallatoxin
Article | Year |
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Hepatitis B virus efficiently infects non-adherent hepatoma cells via human sodium taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide.
Sodium taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide (NTCP) has been reported as a functional receptor for hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. However, HBV could not efficiently infect HepG2 cells expressing NTCP (NTCP-HepG2 cells) under adherent monolayer-cell conditions. In this study, NTCP was mainly detected in the basolateral membrane region, but not the apical site, of monolayer NTCP-HepG2 cells. We hypothesized that non-adherent cell conditions of infection would enhance HBV infectivity. Non-adherent NTCP-HepG2 cells were prepared by treatment with trypsin and EDTA, which did not degrade NTCP in the membrane fraction. HBV successfully infected NTCP-HepG2 cells at a viral dose 10 times lower in non-adherent phase than in adherent phase. Efficient infection of non-adherent NTCP-HepG2 cells with blood-borne or cell-culture-derived HBV was observed and was remarkably impaired in the presence of the myristoylated preS1 peptide. HBV could also efficiently infect HepaRG cells under non-adherent cell conditions. We screened several compounds using our culture system and identified proscillaridin A as a potent anti-HBV agent with an IC50 value of 7.2 nM. In conclusion, non-adherent host cell conditions of infection augmented HBV infectivity in an NTCP-dependent manner, thus providing a novel strategy to identify anti-HBV drugs and investigate the mechanism of HBV infection. Topics: Antiviral Agents; Bufanolides; Cell Adhesion; Digitoxin; Digoxin; Gene Expression; Hep G2 Cells; Hepatitis B virus; High-Throughput Screening Assays; Humans; Organic Anion Transporters, Sodium-Dependent; Phthalazines; Proscillaridin; Receptors, Virus; Simvastatin; Strophanthins; Symporters; Transgenes; Viral Envelope Proteins; Virus Internalization | 2015 |
Cytotoxic effects of cardiac glycosides in colon cancer cells, alone and in combination with standard chemotherapeutic drugs.
Cardiac glycosides have been reported to exhibit cytotoxic activity against several different cancer types, but studies against colorectal cancer are lacking. In a screening procedure aimed at identifying natural products with activity against colon cancer, several cardiac glycosides were shown to be of interest, and five of these were further evaluated in different colorectal cancer cell lines and primary cells from patients. Convallatoxin (1), oleandrin (4), and proscillaridin A (5) were identified as the most potent compounds (submicromolar IC50 values), and digitoxin (2) and digoxin (3), which are used in cardiac disease, exhibited somewhat lower activity (IC50 values 0.27-4.1 microM). Selected cardiac glycosides were tested in combination with four clinically relevant cytotoxic drugs (5-fluorouracil, oxaliplatin, cisplatin, irinotecan). The combination of 2 and oxaliplatin exhibited synergism including the otherwise highly drug-resistant HT29 cell line. A ChemGPS-NP application comparing modes of action of anticancer drugs identified cardiac glycosides as a separate cluster. These findings demonstrate that such substances may exhibit significant activity against colorectal cancer cell lines, by mechanisms disparate from currently used anticancer drugs, but at concentrations generally considered not achievable in patient plasma. Topics: Antineoplastic Agents; Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols; Camptothecin; Cardenolides; Colonic Neoplasms; Digitoxin; Digoxin; Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor; HT29 Cells; Humans; Irinotecan; NF-kappa B; Proscillaridin; Strophanthins | 2009 |
[Comparative evaluation of the treatment of circulatory insufficiency with Lantoside, Erysimine, Corglycon and Strophanthin].
Topics: Cardiac Glycosides; Cardiotonic Agents; Convallaria; Digitalis; Digitalis Glycosides; Glycosides; Heart Failure; Strophanthins | 1962 |