| Literature DB >> 32536867 |
Ruth Barrientos1, Carlos Fernández-Galleguillos1, Edgar Pastene2, Mario Simirgiotis1, Javier Romero-Parra3, Shakeel Ahmed1, Javier Echeverría4.
Abstract
Weinmannia trichosperma Cav. (Cunoniaceae) (local name, tineo; Mapuche names, madén, mëdehue) is an endemic species of Chile and Argentina used in Mapuche traditional medicine in the treatment of chronic diarrhea, inflammation, and wound healing. This study focused on the isolation, analysis, and characterization of the biological activity of compounds and bark extracts from this plant for the first time. The infusion and tincture of the bark were characterized regarding antioxidant and important enzyme inhibitory activities, phenolics, and flavonoids content and UHPLC-ESI-OT-MS metabolite profiling. Twenty-five metabolites were detected in the medicinal infusion of W. trichosperma, three flavonols were isolated: isoastilbin, neoisoastilbin, and neoastilbin ((2R,3S)-, (2S,3R)-, and (2S,3S)-dihydroquercetin 3-O-alpha-l-rhamnoside) by countercurrent chromatography, and the isomers were quantified in the bark using a validated analytical HPLC methodology. The antioxidant properties were measured by ABTS, DPPH, FRAP, ORAC, and TEAC methods. The infusion displayed a strong DPPH and ABTS scavenging activity (IC50 = 20.58 and 3.070 µg ml-1, respectively) while a moderated effect was observed in the FRAP, ORAC, and ABTS assays. The infusion showed a content of phenolic and flavonoid compounds of 442.1 mg GAE g-1 and 15.54 mg QE g-1, respectively. Furthermore, the infusion showed a good and promissory inhibitory activity (33.80%, 33.12%, and 82.86% for AChE, BuChE, and 5-hLOX, respectively) and isoastilbin (51.70%, 50.10%, and 34.29-80.71% for AChE, BuChE, and 5-hLOX, respectively). The biomolecules identified in this study support the traditional uses of this bark and the potential industrial interest from this Valdivian plant species.Entities:
Keywords: HPLC-MS; Weinmannia trichosperma; astilbin; centrifugal partition chromatography; tineo; traditional medicine
Year: 2020 PMID: 32536867 PMCID: PMC7267059 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2020.00780
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 1Picture of W. trichosperma taken in March 2017 in Parque Oncol, Valdivia.
Partition coefficient of different solvents systems (HEMWAT).
| Solvent system | Partition coefficient ( |
|---|---|
| 1:9:1:9 | 1,550 ± 0,090 |
| 1:3:1:3 | 0,425 ± 0,080 |
| 2:5:2:5 | 0,371 ± 0,102 |
| 4:6:4:6 | 0,054 ± 0,025 |
Figure 2HPLC-ESI-MS/MS profile (black: TIC, red: UV at 280 nm) of the infusion of bark from W. trichosperma.
Tentative identification of main compounds of W. trichosperma by HPLC-PDA-OT-MS.
| Peak | Rt
| λ max | Elemental composition | Theorical mass ( | Measured mass ( | Accuracy (δ ppm) | Ions MSn
| Tentative identification |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1.42 | C12H7O4 - | 215.03222 | 215.03389 | −7.8 | Bergapten | ||
| 2 | 1.62 | C15H13O6 - | 331.06720 | 331.06597 | 3.71 | 125.02363 | Galloylglucose | |
| 3 | 2.24 | C15H13O6 - | 331.06689 | 331.06595 | 3.70 | 125.02361 | Galloylgalactose | |
| 4 | 2.96 | 198-230-293 | C15H13O6 - | 169.01369 | 169.01315 | 4.58 | 125.02364 | Gallic acid |
| 5 | 8.23 | 198-230-293 | C19H27O13 - | 463.14523 | 463.14462 | 4.58 | 285.04062 151.00308 | Phlorigidoside B |
| 6 | 8.65 | 198-230-293 | C20H29O12 - | 461.16614 | 461.16535 | 4.58 | 285.06122 | Verbasoside |
| 7 | 9.21 | 198-230-293 | C30H25O12 - | 577.13403 | 577.13405 | 0.35 | 285.06122 | Procyanidin B2 |
| 8 | 9.53 | 198-230-293 | C17H22O12 - | 417.10358 | 417.10275 | 1.97 | Tudoside | |
| 9 | 9.75 | 198-230-293 | C15H13O6 - | 289.07066 | 289.07199 | 4.58 | Epicatechin | |
| 10 | 10.42 | 198-230-293 | C21H23O10 - | 435.12857 | 435.12936 | 0.76 | Phlorizin | |
| 11 | 10.22 | 198-230-293 | C21H23O13 - | 483.11332 | 483.11450 | 2.64 | 285.04062 151.00308 | Hedanthroside E |
| 12 | 10.46 | 283 | C21H21O12 - | 465.10345 | 465.10275 | 1.50 | 269.04437, 161.02782 | Taxifolin-3- |
| 13 | 10.55 | 283 | C21H21O12 - | 465.10358 | 465.10275 | 1.77 | 281.10859, 339.07106, 161.02690 | Helicioside B |
| 14 | 11.22 | 198-230-293 | C15H15O9 - | 339.07216 | 339.07239 | 4.10 | 176.12755 | Esculin |
| 15 | 11.35 | 280 | C20H19O11 - | 435.09308 | 435.09219 | 2.04 | C15H9O6
-
| Naringenin-3- |
| 16 | 11.46 | 198-230-293 | C21H21O11 - | 449.10894 | 449.10922 | 3.08 | 285.04062 151.00308 | Neoastilbin |
| 17 | 11.61 | 198-230-293 | C21H21O11 - | 449.10784 | 449.10907 | 2.74 | 285.04062 151.00308 | Isoastilbin |
| 18 | 12.02 | 198-227-290 | C21H21O11 - | 449.10784 | 449.10870 | −3.09 | – | Neoisoastilbin |
| 19 | 12.23 | 198-230-293 | C21H21O11 - | 449.10784 | 449.10901 | 2.60 | 285.04062 151.00308 | Astilbin |
| 20 | 12.16 | 203 | C28H25O15 - | 433.11560 | 433.11429 | −3.15 | 269.04995, 285.04055 152.01096 | Naringenin-4´ |
| 21 | 12.52 | 286 | C28H25O15 - | 601.11880 | 601.11651 | 1.18 | 285.03967 | Eriodictyol 7-(6`-galloylglucoside) |
| 22 | 12.92 | 288 | C28H25O15 - | 433.11560 | 433.11374 | −3.15 | 271.06120 152.01096 | Naringenin-7 |
| 23 | 14.16 | 266-293 | C15H10O6 - | 285.04028 | 285.03936 | 3.22 | – | Kaempferol |
| 24 | 20.84 | 283 | C12H15O2 - | 191.10732 | 191.10666 | 3.44 | – | Pentyl benzoate |
| 25 | 23.40 | 283 | C15H22O2 - | 233.15436 | 233.15361 | 3.35 | – | Polygodial |
Figure 3Biosynthetic relationship of the isomers of isoastilbin detected in the bark of W. trichosperma.
Total phenolics, flavonoids, antioxidant, and inhibition of cholinesterase and 5-hLOX for infusion and tincture of W. trichosperma and the main isolated compound, isoastilbin.
| Assay | Infusion of | Tincture of | Gallic acid | Isoastilbin | Galantamine/NDGA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 442.1 ± 21.1a | 438.3 ± 22.2a | – | – | – |
|
| 15.54 ± 0.11b | 15.45 ± 0.11b | – | – | – |
|
| 20.58 ± 2.46c | 20.33 ± 2.18c | 0.4622 ± 0.0015k | 33.1 ± 2.1d | – |
|
| 3.070 ± 0.095c | 3.055 ± 0.082c | 0.0985 ± 0.0003k | 2.525 ± 0.261d | – |
|
| 2.700 ± 0.554e | 2.650 ± 0.532e | – | 0.149 ± 0.016f | – |
|
| 1270 ± 36.5g | 1248 ± 32.3g | – | 1901± 33.5g | – |
|
| 3.13 ± 0.03h
| 3.08 ± 0.02h
| – | 4.68 ± 0.03h (51.70% at 2.2 µM) | 0.26 ± 0.02h (69.42% at 3.48 µM) |
|
| 2.94 ± 0.08h
| 2.76 ± 0.08h
| – | 8.51 ± 0.03h (50.10% at 2.2 µM) | 3.82 ± 0.02h |
|
| 82.86 ± 4.31 | – | – | 34.29 ± 3.11 (at 10 µM)i
| 93.50 |
All values were expressed as means ± SD (n = 3).
aexpressed in mg of gallic acid equivalents per gram of dry plant. bexpressed in mg of quercetin equivalents per gram of dry plant.cexpressed in μg of extract per ml. dexpressed in μg of isoastilbin per milliliter. eexpressed in mmol Trolox equivalent per gram of dry plant. fexpressed in mmol trolox equivalent per mg of isoastilbin. kexpressed in μg of gallic acid per ml. gexpressed in µM Trolox equivalents per 100 grams of dry plant. hIC50 in µg per ml. iConcentration Stock Solution equal to 1.52 mg per ml−1.
Binding energies obtained from docking experiments of astilbin, isoastilbin, neoastilbin, neoisoastilbin, and the respective known enzyme inhibitors galantamine and zileuton over acetylcholinesterase (TcAChE) ( ), butyrylcholinesterase (hBuChE) ( ) and 5-lipoxygenase (5- hLOX) ( ).
| Compound | Binding energy (kcal/mol) | Binding energy (kcal/mol) | Binding energy (kcal/mol) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Astilbin | −8.92 | −9.41 | −3.61 |
| Isoastilbin | −8.59 | −9.25 | −1.17 |
| Neoastilbin | −9.78 | −9.38 | −1.3 |
| Neoisoastilbin | −10.37 | −8.98 | 2.33 |
| Galantamine | −11.81 | −9.5 | - |
| Zileuton | - | - | −7.25 |
Figure 4Hydrogen bond interactions showed by isoastilbin into the catalytic site of the three studied enzymes. (A) Isoastilbin into acetylcholinesterase (TcAChE) catalytic site (B) Isoastilbin into butyrylcholinesterase (hBuChE) catalytic site. (C) Isoastilbin into 5-lipoxygenase (5- hLOX) catalytic site. Magenta arrows represent H-bondings with the different amino acids.