Category Archives: Geranium genus

Geraniin

Cancer: Melanoma, T cell leukemia, cervical

Action: Causes cell-cycle arrest

Melanoma

Geraniin, a form of tannin separated from Geranium genus (including Geranium niveum (S. Watson)), causes cell death through induction of apoptosis. Geraniin triggered cell death by caspase-3-mediated cleavage of FAK and was associated with the up-regulation of Fas ligand expression, the activation of caspase-8, the cleavage of Bid, and the induction of cytochrome c release from mitochondria to the cytosol in human melanoma cells (Lee et al., 2008).

Leukemia, Cervical Cancer

Different concentrations of geraniin, the level of expression of the client proteins c-Raf, pAkt, and EGFR, was strongly down-regulated. Geraniin was able to inhibit in vitro the Hsp90α ATPase activity in a dose-dependent manner, with an inhibitory efficiency comparable to that measured for 17-AAG. In addition, this compound compromised the chaperone activity of Hsp90α, monitored by the citrate synthase thermal induced aggregation assay. Geraniin decreased the viability of HeLa and Jurkat cell lines and caused an arrest in G2/M phase. These results, along with the finding that geraniin did not exert any appreciable cytotoxicity on normal cells, encourage further studies on this compound as a promising chemical scaffold for the design of new Hsp90 inhibitors (Vassallo et al., 2013).

References

Lee JC, Tsai CY, Kao JY, et al. (2008). Geraniin-mediated apoptosis by cleavage of focal adhesion kinase through up-regulation of Fas ligand expression in human melanoma cells. Mol Nutr Food Res, 52(6):655-63.


Vassallo A, Vaccaro MC, De Tommasi N, Dal Piaz F, Leone A. (2013). Identification of the plant compound geraniin as a novel hsp90 inhibitor. PLoS One, 8(9):e74266. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0074266.