| Literature DB >> 28008316 |
Mahmoud F Elsebai1, Andrei Mocan2, Atanas G Atanasov3.
Abstract
The different pharmacologic properties of plants-containing cynaropicrin, especially artichokes, have been known for many centuries. More recently, cynaropicrin exhibited a potential activity against all genotypes of hepatitis C virus (HCV). Cynaropicrin has also shown a wide range of other pharmacologic properties such as anti-hyperlipidemic, anti-trypanosomal, anti-malarial, antifeedant, antispasmodic, anti-photoaging, and anti-tumor action, as well as activation of bitter sensory receptors, and anti-inflammatory properties (e.g., associated with the suppression of the key pro-inflammatory NF-κB pathway). These pharmacological effects are very supportive factors to its outstanding activity against HCV. Structurally, cynaropicrin might be considered as a potential drug candidate, since it has no violations for the rule of five and its water-solubility could allow formulation as therapeutic injections. Moreover, cynaropicrin is a small molecule that can be easily synthesized and as the major constituent of the edible plant artichoke, which has a history of safe dietary use. In summary, cynaropicrin is a promising bioactive natural product that, with minor hit-to-lead optimization, might be developed as a drug for HCV.Entities:
Keywords: anti-gastritis action; anti-hepatitis C virus; anti-hyperlipidemic; anti-inflammatory; anti-parasite; antibacterial; antitumor; cynaropicrin
Year: 2016 PMID: 28008316 PMCID: PMC5143615 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2016.00472
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 1Structure of cynaropicrin.
Figure 2Pharmacological effects of cynaropicrin.
Figure 3Structure of 13-.
Figure 4Structures of deacylcynaropicrin and dimethylamino cynaropicrin derivative.
Overview of reported activities of cynaropicrin, its sources, models used to detect the respective effects, and applied doses.
| Anti-HCV activity | EC50 from 0.4 to 1.4 μM for different genotypes of HCV | Wild Egyptian artichoke leaves, | Elsebai et al., | |
| Anti-hyperlipidemic activity | Olive oil-loaded mice | 50 and 100 mg/kg, (2 h after olive oil administration) | Artichoke leaves, | Shimoda et al., |
| Anti-tumor and cytotoxic activity | Quantification of major adhesion molecules (CD98 and CD29) in macrophages, using a quantitative aggregation assay established with U937 cells | IC50 2.98 and 3.46 μM, respectively | Cynaropicrin (purity: 97%) was purified from roots of | Cho et al., |
| Leukocyte cancer cells (e.g., lymphoma or leukemia) | Cynaropicrin dose-dependently decreased the viability of U937, Eol-1 and Jurkat T cells with IC50 values of 3.11, 10.9 and 2.36 μM, respectively | Roots of | Cho et al., | |
| Human gastric adenocarcinoma (AGS) cells | IC50 0.68 μg/ml | The aerial part of the Mongolian medicinal plant | Kang et al., | |
| IL-6-inducible and constitutive STAT3 activation in THP- 1 cells and the cell line DU145 | IC50 of 12 μM | Cynaropicrin was purchased from PhytoLab (Vestenbergsgreuth, Germany) | Butturini et al., | |
| Homozygotization Index (HI) test on two diploid strains of | Cells exposed to the drug at a concentration of 25 μg/ml | From | Salvador et al., | |
| Solid and ascites tumors (S-180 sarcoma and Ehrlich carcinoma) | IC50 values of 2.5 and 2.4 μg/ml for cynaropicrin | Isolated from the Tibetan plant | Zong et al., | |
| SK-OV-3, LOX-IMVI, A549, MCF-7, PC-3, and HCT-15 cell lines | IC50 values between 1.1 and 8.7 μg/ml | From the flowers of | Ha et al., | |
| Human cancer cell lines of malignant melanoma (SK-MEL), epidermoid (KB), ductal (BT-549) and SK-OV-3 | IC50 values between 2.0 and 6.3 μg/ml | From the aerial parts of | Muhammad et al., | |
| Sulforhodamin B Bioassay (SRB) against five cultured human tumor cells: A549, SK-OV-3, SK-MEL-2, XF498 (CNS), and HCT-15 | ED50 values ranging from 0.29 to 1.37 μg/ml | From | Choi et al., | |
| SK-MEL-2 and SK-OV-3 human tumor cell lines | ED50 values of 4.07 μM, and 7.42 μM, respectively | From the aerial parts of | Yang et al., | |
| Human leukemia cell lines HL-60 and U937 | IC50 values of 2.0 ± 0.9 and 5.1 ± 0.4 μM/L | From the aerial parts of | Kolli et al., | |
| Anti-inflammatory activity | Murine macrophage RAW264.7 cells, and U937 cells | IC50 on TNF-α production was 2.86 μg/ml | Roots of | Cho et al., |
| The release of TNF-α and NO from either differentiated U937 cells or RAW264.7 cells activated by lipopolysaccharide and interferon-γ | IC50s between 1.1 and 8.24 μM | Roots of | Cho et al., | |
| Antiphotoaging and antioxidant activities | Melanocytes | The cells were pretreated with cynaropicrin 2, 4 or 8 μM | Artichoke | Tanaka et al., |
| Keratinocytes | EC50 and CC50 on Nqo1 induction was 0.89 and 47.6 μM, respectively | Artichoke | ||
| PenCDF-induced toxicity in mice | 20 mg/kg | Artichoke | Yamada et al., | |
| Antibacterial activity | The MurA enzymes of | IC50 = 12.5 μM for E. coli MurA, at 12 nM. IC50 = 12.1 μM for | Leaves of | Bachelier et al., |
| Anti-parasitic activity | Murine model of trypanosomiasis | Inhibition against | From the herb | Zimmermann et al., |
| Blood collected from | IC50 value of 93.5 μg/ml | From the Brazilian plant | Schinor et al., | |
| IC50 values of 0.23, 5.14, 1.56, and 1.56 μM, respectively | From | Mokoka et al., | ||
| Opisthorchosis model in golden hamsters | At a dose of 0.8 mg/kg, the samples taken from hamsters treated with cynaropicrin showed no fluke eggs under the microscope on the 7th day | The aerial parts from | Drab et al., | |
| Antifeedant activity | 4th instar larvae of Bihar hairy caterpillar, | The compound was tested at 0.02, 0.05, 0.25, 0.5 and 1% cynaropicrin in acetone. EC50 0.01 and 0.41, respectively | From | Bhattacharyya et al., |
| Three species of stored product insect pests; | Average index value activity of 66.6 | From aerial parts of | Cis et al., | |
| Gastric actions | Male Sprague-Dawley strain SPF rats (Nippon SLC, Shizuoka, Japan) | Cynaropicrin at an oral dose of 5 mg/kg markedly prevented the mucosal injury by 98% | Artichoke ( | Ishida et al., |
| Male Sprague-Dawley rats | At low doses, cynaropicrin is one of the main active choleretic principles in | Aerial parts of | Glasl et al., | |
| Guinea-Pig ileum | IC50 value of 0.065 mg/ml | From Brazilian | Emendörfer et al., |
Figure 5Proposed biosynthetic pathway for cynaropicrin.