| Literature DB >> 31480508 |
Bruno Casciaro1, Andrea Calcaterra2, Floriana Cappiello3, Mattia Mori4, Maria Rosa Loffredo3, Francesca Ghirga5, Maria Luisa Mangoni6, Bruno Botta2, Deborah Quaglio2.
Abstract
Staphylococcus aureus is a major human pathogen causing a wide range of nosocomial infections including pulmonary, urinary, and skin infections. Notably, the emergence of bacterial strains resistant to conventional antibiotics has prompted researchers to find new compounds capable of killing these pathogens. Nature is undoubtedly an invaluable source of bioactive molecules characterized by an ample chemical diversity. They can act as unique platform providing new scaffolds for further chemical modifications in order to obtain compounds with optimized biological activity. A class of natural compounds with a variety of biological activities is represented by alkaloids, important secondary metabolites produced by a large number of organisms including bacteria, fungi, plants, and animals. In this work, starting from the screening of 39 alkaloids retrieved from a unique in-house library, we identified a heterodimer -carboline alkaloid, nigritanine, with a potent anti-Staphylococcus action. Nigritanine, isolated from Strychnos nigritana, was characterized for its antimicrobial activity against a reference and three clinical isolates of S. aureus. Its potential cytotoxicity was also evaluated at short and long term against mammalian red blood cells and human keratinocytes, respectively. Nigritanine showed a remarkable antimicrobial activity (minimum inhibitory concentration of 128 µM) without being toxic in vitro to both tested cells. The analysis of the antibacterial activity related to the nigritanine scaffold furnished new insights in the structure-activity relationships (SARs) of -carboline, confirming that dimerization improves its antibacterial activity. Taking into account these interesting results, nigritanine can be considered as a promising candidate for the development of new antimicrobial molecules for the treatment of S. aureus-induced infections.Entities:
Keywords: Staphylococcus aureus; alkaloids; antimicrobial activity; cytotoxicity; natural products; plant secondary metabolites; -carboline
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31480508 PMCID: PMC6783983 DOI: 10.3390/toxins11090511
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
List of alkaloids tested in this study.
| Mol. | Common Name | Chemical Structure | M.W. | Molecular Formula | Source | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dihydroberberine·HCl | 337.37 | C20H19NO4·HCl | [ | |||
| Bulbocapnine·HCl | 325.36 | C19H19NO4·HCl | Species: | [ | ||
| Boldine | 327.37 | C19H21NO4 | Species: | [ | ||
| Cotarmine·HCl | 237.25 | C12H15NO4·HCl | Synthetic | [ | ||
| Chelidonine | 353.37 | C20H19NO5 | Species: | [ | ||
| Emetine·HCl | 480.64 | C29H40N2O4 | Species: | [ | ||
| ( | 355.43 | C21H25NO4 | Species: | [ | ||
| Hydrastine | 383.39 | C21H21NO6 | Species: | [ | ||
| Noscapine (Narcotine) | 413.42 | C22H23NO7 | Species: | [ | ||
| Papaverine | 339.39 | C20H21NO4 | Species: | [ | ||
| Tubocurarine Chloride·HCl | 609.73 | C37H41N2O6·HCl + Cl- | Species: | [ | ||
| Cinchonine | 294.39 | C19H22N2O | Species: | [ | ||
| Kokusaginine | 259.26 | C14H13NO4 | Species: | [ | ||
| Maculine | 243.21 | C13H9NO4 | Species: | [ | ||
| 4-methoxy-2-(1-ethylpropyl)-quinoline | 229.32 | C15H19NO | Species: | [ | ||
| Aspidospermine | 354.49 | C22H30N2O2 | [ | |||
| Brucine | 394.47 | C23H26N2O4 | Species: | [ | ||
| Diaboline | 353.41 | C21H23NO4 | Species: | [ | ||
| Physostigmine (Eserine) | 275.35 | C15H21N3O2 | [ | |||
| Holstiine | 382.45 | C22H26N2O4 | Species: | [ | ||
| Pseudobrucine | 410.46 | C23H26N2O5 | Species: | [ | ||
| Retuline | 338.44 | C21H26N2O2 | [ | |||
| Serotonin | 176.22 | C10H12N2O | Species: | [ | ||
| Triptamine·HCl | 160.22 | C10H12N2 HCl | [ | |||
| Vomicine·HC1 | 380.44 | C22H24N2O4 HCl | [ | |||
| Vindoline | 456.53 | C25H32N2O6 | [ | |||
| Akagerine | 324.42 | C20H24N2O2 | [ | |||
| Canthin-6-one | 220.23 | C14H8N2O | Species: | [ | ||
| α-Carboline | 168.19 | C11H8N2 | Synthetic | [ | ||
| Harmane | 182.22 | C12H10N2 | Species: | [ | ||
| Norharmane | 168.19 | C11H8N2 | Species: | [ | ||
| Harmine | 212.25 | C13H12N2O | Species: | [ | ||
| Ibogaine | 310.43 | C20H26N2O | Species: | [ | ||
| Mitragynine | 398.50 | C23H30N2O4 | Species: | [ | ||
| Nigritanine | 452.63 | C30H36N4 | [ | |||
| Paynantheine | 396.48 | C23H28N2O4 | Species: | [ | ||
| Rhynchophylline | 384.47 | C22H28N2O4 | Species: | [ | ||
| Speciociliatine | 398.50 | C23H30N2O4 | Species: | [ | ||
| Yohimbine·HCl | 354.44 | C21H26N2O3 HCl | [ | |||
Mol.: molecule number; M.W.: molecular weight; Ref.: references.
Diameters of the inhibition zone of all the active tested compounds against the reference Gram(+) and Gram(-) bacterial strains.
| Inhibition Zone Assay | Diameter of Inhibition Zone (mm) 1 | |
|---|---|---|
| Compound | Gram-Positive | Gram-Negative |
| Dihydroberberine·HCl ( | 7.800 | n.a. |
| ( | 7.600 | n.a. |
| Canthin-6-one ( | 6.100 | n.a. |
| Harmane ( | 4.360 | 8.640 |
| Harmine ( | n.a. | 6.250 |
| Mytragine ( | 5.420 | n.a. |
| Nigritanine ( | 10.39 | n.a. |
| Paynantheine ( | 8.440 | n.a. |
| Speciociliatine ( | 8.240 | n.a. |
1 Data represent the mean of three independent experiments with standard deviation (SD) not exceeding 0.2; n.a.: not active.
Diameters of the inhibition zone of some active alkaloids against the reference and clinical isolates of S. aureus strains.
| Inhibition Zone Assay | Diameter of Inhibition Zone (mm) 1 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compound | ||||
| Mytragine ( | 5.420 | 4.000 | n.a. | n.a. |
| Nigritanine ( | 10.39 | 11.20 | 8.440 | 9.100 |
| Paynantheine ( | 8.440 | 3.800 | n.a. | n.a. |
| Speciociliatine ( | 8.240 | 4.520 | 4.340 | 4.580 |
1 Data represent the mean of three independent experiments with SD not exceeding 0.2.
Figure 1Representative image of the inhibition zone assays of nigritanine (35) and some other alkaloids against the reference strain and the three clinical isolates of S. aureus. Scale bars represent 1 cm.
Minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) (μM) of nigritanine, speciociliatine, mytragine, paynantheine, and rhyncophylline against the reference and clinical isolates of S. aureus strains. MICs are the values obtained from three identical readings out of four independent experiments.
| Strains | Nigritanine | Speciociliatine | Mytragine | Paynantheine | Rhyncophylline |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 128 μM | > 256 μM | > 256 μM | > 256 μM | > 256 μM | |
| 128 μM | > 256 μM | > 256 μM | > 256 μM | > 256 μM | |
| 128 μM | > 256 μM | > 256 μM | > 256 μM | > 256 μM | |
| 128 μM | > 256 μM | > 256 μM | > 256 μM | > 256 μM |
Figure 2Reduction in the number of viable bacterial cells (evaluated by colony forming unit (CFU) counting) of the reference and clinical isolates of S. aureus strains after 16 hours treatment with nigritanine at the MIC (128 μM) compared to control (Ctrl) samples consisting in vehicle-treated bacterial cells. The data represent the mean of three independent experiments ± SD. The levels of statistical significance versus the Ctrl samples were p < 0.01 (**); p < 0.001 (***).
Figure 3(a) Chemical structure of corynane. (b) Structure–activity relationship (SARs) analysis of tetrahydro-β-carboline alkaloids with respect to antibacterial activity.
Figure 4Hemolytic activity of nigritanine at 128 μM (MIC), 256 μM (2 × MIC), and 512 μM (4 × MIC) after 40 minutes of treatment compared to the least active speciociliatine. The data represent the mean ± standard error of the mean (SEM) of three independent experiments. The level of statistical significance between the two compounds was p < 0.01 (**).
Figure 5Effect of nigritanine on the viability of HaCaT cells determined by the MTT assay. Cell viability is expressed as a percentage with respect to the control. All data are the means of three independent experiments ± SEM.