| Literature DB >> 29992112 |
Shriniwas S Basaiyye1, Pravin K Naoghare1, Sanjeev Kanojiya2, Amit Bafana1, Patrizio Arrigo3, Kannan Krishnamurthi1, Saravanadevi Sivanesan1.
Abstract
The present study demonstrates apoptosis-inducing potential and mechanism of action of Tribulus terristris alkaloid extract in Jurkat E6-1 cancer cell line. Liquid Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry and High Resolution-Mass Spectrometry analysis identified the presence of four N-feruloyltyramine derivatives, namely trans-N-feruloyl-3-hydroxytyramine (1), trans-N-coumaroyltyramine (2), trans-N-feruloyltyramine (3) and trans-N-feruloyl-3-ethoxytyramine (4) in the alkaloid extract. Compounds 2 and 3 have not been yet reported in the alkaloid extract of T. terristris. In silico analysis revealed therapeutic potential of N-feruloyltyramine derivatives and strong binding efficiency to both chains of Tumor Necrosis Factor Receptor 1. Treatment of alkaloids extract to Jurkat E6-1 clone induced dose-dependent cytotoxicity (LC50 140.4 μg mL-1). Jurkat cells treated with alkaloids extract at sub-lethal concentration showed DNA fragmentation, enhancement in caspase-3 activity and phosphatidylserine translocation (apoptosis indicator) compared to control cells. Gene expression analysis using Human Apoptosis RT2 Profiler PCR Array analysis upon alkaloid treatment was found to significantly alter expression of critical genes such as TNFR1, FADD, AIFM, CASP8, TP53, DFFA and NFKB1. These genes are predicted to mediate apoptotic cell death via both intrinsic and extrinsic apoptosis pathway. In summary, we report the identification of new N-feruloyltyramine derivatives from alkaloid extract of T. terristris fruit with probable anti-leukemic and pharmacological potential.Entities:
Keywords: Apoptosis; Cytotoxicity; In silico; N-feruloyltyramine; Tribulus terristris L.
Year: 2017 PMID: 29992112 PMCID: PMC6035304 DOI: 10.1016/j.jtcme.2017.08.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Tradit Complement Med ISSN: 2225-4110
Fig. 1Compounds identified in T. terrestris fruits alkaloids extracts by LC-MS/MS and HR-MS analysis.1 = Trans-N-feruloyl-3-hydroxytyramine; 2 = Trans-N-coumaroyltyramine; 3 = Trans-N-feruloyltyramine; 4 = Trans-N-feruloyl-3-ethoxytyramine. Proposed MS/MS fragmentations of N-feruloyltyramine derivatives are illustrated.
Chromatographic retention time and mass spectrometry detection of N-feruloyltyramine and their derivative in the alkaloids extract of the fruits of T. terristris.
| Sr. No. | Retention Time (Rt) | Name | Molecular Weight | ESI (+) [M+H]+ [2 M + H]+ | Calculate Mass | Observed Mass | Chemical Formula | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 4.74 | Trans- | 329 | 330 | 659 | 330.1336 | 330.1333 | C18H20NO5+ |
| 2 | 5.88 | Trans- | 283 | 284 | 567 | 284.1281 | 284.1281 | C17H18NO3+ |
| 3 | 6.04 | Trans- | 313 | 314 | 627 | 313.1387 | 314.1384 | C18H20NO4+ |
| 4 | 6.96 | Trans- | 357 | 358 | 715 | 358.1649 | 358.1655 | C20H24NO5+ |
Chemical-physics properties of N-feruloyltyramine and its derivative selected for docking analysis.
| Compound | IUPAC Name | CAS Number | Molecular Mass | Number of Heavy Atoms | Number of Rotable Bonds | Number of Hydrogen Bonds Donors Acceptors | XlogP3 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Donors | Acceptors | |||||||
| 1 | Trans- | 66648-44-0 | 329 | 24 | 6 | 4 | 5 | 1.8 |
| 2 | Trans- | 36417-86-4 | 283 | 21 | 5 | 3 | 3 | 2.7 |
| 3 | Trans- | 66648-43-9 | 313 | 21 | 5 | 3 | 4 | 2.7 |
| 4 | Trans- | Unknown | 357 | 25 | 7 | 3 | 5 | 2.5 |
Predicted value for an unknown compound.
Interactions of N-feruloyltyramine derivatives with 1NCF chains of Tumor Necrosis Factor Receptor-1 (TNFR1).
| Gene ID | Compounds | GCE | aVdW | rVdW | ACE | Number of Contacts Clashes−1 | Ligand Efficiency (kcal mol−1 per non-H) | Amino Acid Residues with Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1NCF Chain A | -40.43 | -17.38 | 3.06 | -12.76 | 90/8 | -1.68 | G87, C88, K90, N91, Q92, Y93, R94, C107, C119, Q120, E121 | |
| -38.02 | -14.94 | 1.83 | -12.37 | 82/6 | -1.81 | I75, C88, R89, K90, N91, Q92, C107, C119, Q120, E121 | ||
| -37.07 | -18.22 | 2.44 | -8.43 | 85/5 | -1.76 | Y93, F105, N106, C107, S108, L109, L111, N124, N138, E139 | ||
| -40.42 | -19.04 | 5.03 | -12.07 | 100/9 | -1.79 | I75, G87, C88, K90, N91, Q92, R94, C107, S118, C119 | ||
| 1NCF Chain B | -41.82 | -18.14 | 4.74 | -14.11 | 89/6 | -1.74 | N228, N243, C244, S245, L246, C247, V252, S255, C256, T262 | |
| -41.89 | -18.05 | 4.02 | -13.63 | 86/3 | -1.99 | R226, K227, N228, Q229, C244, S245, L246, C247, V252, S255, C256, T262 | ||
| -39.45 | -18.65 | 5.94 | -12.54 | 93/3 | -1.87 | R226, K227, N228, Q229, C244, S245, L246, V252, S255, C256, T262 | ||
| -32.66 | -17.49 | 3.57 | -8.02 | 85/11 | -1.3 | R204, Q209, T221, V222, C223, R231, Y233, E236, F239 |
Note: GCE, Global Contact Energy; aVdW, Van der Waals attractive; rVdW, Van der Waals repulsive; ACE, Atomic Contact Energy.
Fig. 2Cytotoxicity of T. terrestris alkaloids extract on Jurkat E6-1 cell line. a) MTT Assay: Exposure (24 h) of alkaloids extract resulted in dose-dependent cytotoxicity in Jurkat E6-1 cells. b) Trypan Blue Test: Time and concentration dependant increase in Jurkat cell's death exposed to T. terrestris alkaloids extract along with staurosporine treated positive control cells. Error bars represent variations in three independent measurements.
Fig. 3Agarose gel electrophoresis (2 %) of total DNA (a) and caspase-3 activity in pmolmin−1mL−1(b) in Jurkat cells exposed to different concentrations of T. terrestris alkaloids extract at respective time intervals. Vehicle control, positive control and DNA ladder represents DMSO, 5 μM Staurosporine and 1 kb DNA ladder, respectively. The arrowheads represent DNA fragments of 180–200 base pairs and multiples thereof. In caspase-3 assay, the values were normalized from vehicle control and the error bars represents standard error (n = 3) with level of significance (*p < 0.05).
Fig. 4Flow cytometric analysis. Scatter plot represents FITC Annexin V staining in untreated (left), Staurosporin treated (left) and cells treated with T. terristris alkaloids extract for 12 h and 24 h. Upper panel indicate viable or non-apoptotic cells (M1) and the cells undergoing for early or late apoptosis (M2). In the lower panel, Q1-LL represents live, Q1-LR represents apoptotic cells; Q1-UR represents dead cells and Q1-UL represent slate apoptotic cells.
Fig. 5Scatter plot compares normalized expression of each gene on array between the two selected groups by plotting them against one another to visualize large gene expression changes (a). The central line indicates unchanged gene expression. The dotted lines indicate selected fold regulation threshold. Data points beyond the dotted lines in upper left and lower right sections represents differentially expressed genes. The clustergram performs non-supervised hierarchical clustering of the entire dataset to display a heat map with dendrogram indicating co-regulated genes across groups or individual samples (TNFRSF1A = TNFR1) (b). Expression of key genes involved in apoptotic signalling pathway analysed through RT2 PCR array profiler (c).
Fig. 6Proposed apoptosis pathway in Jurkat E6-1 cells exposed to T. terristris alkaloids extract. The upward arrowheads (↑) indicate up regulation of the genes involved in apoptosis pathways against exposure of alkaloids extract. Biomolecule interactions of all compounds identified in T. terristris alkaloids fraction were analysed by in silico studies. The extrinsic pathway of apoptosis was initiated by the upregulation of TNFR1 gene followed by FADD and Caspase-8 activation while TP53 trigger the intrinsic pathway. The fold-change expressions of some genes (BID, CYCS and caspase-9) of intrinsic pathways were between 1.5–1.9. The caspase activated DNase catalyses the fragmentation of genomic DNA. The schematic pathway was proposed based on the results obtained by RT2 Profiler array, DNA fragmentation assay, caspase-3 activation assay and apoptosis assay.