| Literature DB >> 20836891 |
Nidhi Pandey1, Yamini B Tripathi.
Abstract
Antioxidant activity of Pueraria tuberose DC, (PT) Leguminosae (Fabaceae) has already been reported by us and here an active compound has been isolated and its action on expression of iNOS protein has been explored by using LPS induced changes in attached rat peritoneal macrophage cell culture. The pure compound was isolated by column chromatography and its structure was characterized by spectral studies, which was identified as tuberosin (5 hydroxy 3,4,7,3',4' pentamethoxy flavone). Its antioxidant capacity was determined and compared with alcoholic extract as EC50 value for scavenging potential towards pre-generated monocation ABTS* radical, superoxide radicals, hydroxyl radicals, metal chelation property and on lipid peroxidation. Further, rat peritoneal macrophages were isolated, cultured and the attached macrophages were exposed to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) with different concentrations of tuberosin (pretreatment for 30 min). After 17 h the released NO content, in culture supernatant, was indirectly estimated as accumulated nitrite by Griess reagent. To understand the mechanism of action, the extent of expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase genes, the iNOS protein was assessed in macrophage lysate by using its antibody on western blot analysis. Tuberosin significantly scavenged all the species of FRs, described above and it also inhibited the LPS induced release of NO and amount of iNOS protein in macrophages. All the changes were significant and concentration dependent. Thus it could be suggested that tuberosin, is one of the active principles of Pueraria tuberose, which directly scavenges various species of Free radicals (FRs) and also inhibits LPS induced inflammatory changes in macrophages.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20836891 PMCID: PMC2944242 DOI: 10.1186/1476-9255-7-47
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Inflamm (Lond) ISSN: 1476-9255 Impact factor: 4.981
Analytical data of isolated compound (Tuberosin; 5hydroxy 3,6,7,3'4' pentamethoxy flavone)
| Melting point | 271-72°C |
|---|---|
| TLC pattern | Solvent system: benzene:ethyl acetate (7:3) |
| UV(MeOH) | (log ε): 255(4.26), |
| IR (KBr) cm-1 | 3480, 1664 and 1559 |
| 1H NMR (CDCl3) | δ 12.62 (1 H, s, O - H), 7.75 (2 H, m, 2' - H and 6' - H), 7.01 (1 H, d, J = 9.0 Hz, 5' - H), 6.51 (1 H, s, 8 - H), 3.98 (9 H, s, 3 × OCH3), 3.93 (3 H, s, OCH3) and 3.87 (3 H, s, OCH3). |
| 13C NMR | δ 158.7 (C - 2), 132.4 (C - 3), 178.8 (C - 4), 155.7 (C-5), 138.8 (C-6), 152.7 (C-7), 90.3 (C- 8), 151.5 (C-9), 106.6 (C-10), 122.9 (C-1'), 111.7 (C-2'), 148.9 (C-3'), 152.2 (C-4'), 111.6 (C-5'), 122.1 (C-6'), 60.7 (6-OCH3), 56.1 (7-OCH3), 60.1 (3-OCH3), 56.2 (3' - OCH3) and 55.9 (4' - OCH3). |
Figure 1Structure of tuberosin.
Effect of tuberosin on pre-generated ABTS* radical and superoxide radical scavenging property
| Concentration of tuberosin (μmuM) | % decrease in absorbance at 734 nm (mean ± S.D.) for ABTS* radical scavenging | % decrease in absorbance at 560 nm (mean ± S.D.) for SO radical scavenging |
|---|---|---|
| 50 | 8.42 ± 0.99* | 5.78 ± 0.46** |
| 125 | 24.09 ± 0.33* | 18.98 ± 0.76** |
| 200 | 45.16 ± 0.89* | 27.89 ± 0.55** |
| 250 | 60.00 ± 1.05* | 54.78 ± 0.87** |
| 375 | 77.25 ± 1.06* | 67.11 ± 0.77** |
| 500 | 93.08 ± 0.63 * | 83.44 ± 0.63** |
| 775 | 97.24 ± 0.89* | 97.24 ± 1.22** |
| EC50 | 198.67 μmuM | 205.11 μmuM |
| EC50 of Vit C- 220 μmuM, | EC50 for quercetin- 0.60 μmuM | |
n = 3, Level of significance: p* < 0.1 and p** < 0.001
Inhibition of lipid peroxidation induced by FeSO4 using egg yolk homogenates
| Concentration of tuberosin (mM) | Absorbance at 532 nm | % decrease in absorbance |
|---|---|---|
| Blank | 0.380 | -- |
| control | 0.355 | -- |
| 12 | 0.320 ± .021* | 7.08 ± 1.30 |
| 18 | 0.283 ± .020* | 17.89 ± 1.00 |
| 25 | 0.248 ± .018** | 27.98 ± 1.42 |
| 30 | 0.198 ± .015** | 42.74 ± 0.96 |
| 40 | 0.131 ± .010** | 62.05 ± 1.50 |
| 45 | 0.073 ± .002** | 78.76 ± 1.16 |
| 50 | 0.049 ± .001** | 85.83 ± 1.30 |
n = 3 EC50 of tuberosin- 49.22 mM, EC50 for quercetin- 0.60 μmuM@
Level of significance: p* < 0.1 and p** < 0.001. @Reference 18
Effect of tuberosin in the deoxyribose assay in the presence of EDTA (non-site specific) to assess the Hydroxyl radical scavenging activity and absence of EDTA (site specific) to assess metal chelation property
| Concentration of tuberosin (mM) | Absorbance at 532 nm (mean ± S.D) | % decrease in absorbance | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Non site specific) | (Site specific) | (Non site specific) | (Site specific) | |
| Normal | 0.310 ± .018 | 0.515 ± .028 | -- | -- |
| Blank | 0.288 ± .017 | 0.485 ± .022 | -- | -- |
| 0.25 | 0.280 ± 0.014* | 0.400 ± .024* | 2.60 ± 0.94 | 17.54 ± 1.25 |
| 0.50 | 0.256 ± .015* | 0.356 ± .021** | 11.22 ± 0.97 | 26.54 ± 1.15 |
| 0.75 | 0.235 ± .013** | 0.311 ±.020** | 18.35 ± 0.88 | 35.82 ± 0.91 |
| 1.00 | 0.199 ± .012** | 0.271 ± .018** | 30.73 ± 1.08 | 44.08 ± 0.96 |
| 1.25 | 0.156 ± .011** | 0.190 ± .011** | 45.94 ± 0.94 | 60.80 ± 0.94 |
| 1.80 | 0.125 ± .010** | 0.119 ± .008** | 56.72 ± 1.14 | 75.51 ± 0.99 |
| 2.50 | 0.092 ± .007** | 0.01 ± .001** | 67.94 ± 0.67 | 98.04 ± 0.62 |
n = 3; EC50 of tuberosin: Non site specific assay = 1.14 mM and site specific assay = 0.918 mM; EC50 (μmuM) for quercetin - Non site specific assay 0.80 and site specific assay- 0.50; Level of significance: p* < 0.1 and p** < 0.001.
Effect of tuberosin on LPS induced NO production and iNOS expression by attached rat peritoneal macrophages.
| Concentration of tuberosin (ng/ml) | NO production (μg/104cells) | Pixel value of iNOS bands in western blot |
|---|---|---|
| Normal Cells | 10.11 ± 1.043 | - |
| Only LPS (20 ng/ml) | 39.89 ± 1.983 | 16023 |
| LPS(20 ng/ml)+Tuberosin(ng/ml) | - | |
| 100 | 38.09 ± 1.933 | 15878 |
| 200 | 36.09 ± 1.862** | - |
| 300 | 27.02 ± 1.698** | 10678 |
| 400 | 21.16 ± 1.829* | - |
| 500 | 13.04 ± 1.904* | - |
| 600 | 10.09 ± 1.898* | 5082 |
| LPS + Quercetin(50 ng/ml) | 9.98 ± 1.041 | 4223 |
| EC50 of tuberosin | 399.68 ng/ml | - |
| EC50 of quercetin | 190 ng/ml | - |
Values were significant (p* < 0.1, p** < 0.001) when compared with experimental control.
Figure 2Effect of different concentrations of Tuberosin on LPS induced iNOS expression in attached rat peritoneal macrophages. The macrophages were pretreated with quercetin and tuberosin as given below for 30 minutes and then LPS was added (20 ng/ml) and incubated for 17 hrs. The normal cells were exposed to 0.1% DMSO without any LPS. Lane-1: LPS(20 ng/ml),Lane-2: Normal cells. Lane3:LPS+Quercetine(50 ng/ml), Lane4:LPS+Tuberosine(100 ng/ml), Lane-5: LPS+Tuberosine(300 ng/ml), Lane-6: LPS+Tuberosine(600 ng/ml). The bars depict densitometric analysis of western blot (given in the inset). This picture represents one out of total three experiments carried out separately.