| Literature DB >> 34006257 |
Prapaporn Chaniad1, Mathirut Mungthin2, Apirak Payaka3, Parnpen Viriyavejakul4, Chuchard Punsawad5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: At present, the emergence and spread of antimalarial drug resistance has become a significant problem worldwide. There has been a challenge in searching for natural products for the development of novel antimalarial drugs. Therefore, this study aims to evaluate compounds from Dioscorea bulbifera responsible for antimalarial properties and investigate potential interactions of the compounds with Plasmodium falciparum lactate dehydrogenase (PfLDH), an essential glycolytic enzyme in the parasite's life cycle.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-malarial activity; Dioscorea bulbifera L.; Malaria; Molecular docking; Plasmodium falciparum
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34006257 PMCID: PMC8132342 DOI: 10.1186/s12906-021-03317-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Complement Med Ther ISSN: 2662-7671
Fig. 1The structures of compounds isolated from D. bulbifera bulbils
Antimalarial properties against P. falciparum K1 and 3D7 strains and the cytotoxicity of extracts and isolated compounds from D. bulbifera
| Samples | IC | CC | |
|---|---|---|---|
| K1 | 3D7 | ||
| Ethanol extractc | 15.8 ± 3.18 | > 80 | > 80 |
| Water extractc | > 80 | > 80 | > 80 |
| 8-Epidiosbulbin E acetate (1) | > 80 | > 80 | > 80 |
| 15,16-Epoxy-6α- | > 80 | > 80 | > 80 |
| Sitosterol-β-D-glucoside (3) | > 80 | > 80 | > 80 |
| 3,5-Dimethoxyquercetin (4) | 44.03 ± 1.47a,b | 70.79 ± 2.32a,b | > 80 |
| (+)-Catechin (5) | > 80 | > 80 | > 80 |
| Quercetin (6) | 28.47 ± 0.90a,b | 50.99 ± 7.28a,b | > 80 |
| Kaempferol (7) | 62.45 ± 1.33a,b | > 80 | > 80 |
| Allantoin (8) | > 80 | > 80 | > 80 |
| 2,4,3′,5′-Tetrahydroxybibenzyl (9) | 39.99 ± 2.50a,b | 58.85 ± 4.31a,b | 16.71 |
| 2,4,6,7-Tetrahydroxy-9,10-dihydrophenanthrene (10) | 58.34 ± 1.96a,b | > 80 | > 80 |
| Myricetin (11) | > 80 | > 80 | > 80 |
| 5,7,4′-Trihydroxy-2-styrylchromone (12) | > 80 | > 80 | > 80 |
| Quercetin-3- | > 80 | > 80 | > 80 |
| Quercetin-3- | 48.33 ± 1.21a,b | 68.93 ± 4.31a,b | > 80 |
| Chloroquined | 103.2 ± 4.50 | 9.91 ± 0.56 | ND |
| Artesunated | 0.53 ± 0.04 | 1.81 ± 0.19 | ND |
| Doxorubicin | ND | ND | 1.96 ± 0.11 |
ND not determined
aStatistically significant difference between chloroquine and the sample, p < 0.05 (mean ± S.D. of three determinations)
bStatistically significant difference between artesunate and the sample, p < 0.05 (mean ± S.D. of three determinations)
cConcentration of treated samples and IC50 unit expressed in μg/ml
dConcentration of positive control and IC50 unit expressed in nM
The binding energy and interacting amino acid residues of compounds from D. bulbifera with PfLDH
| Compounds | Binding energy | H-bond interaction | Hydrophobic interaction | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of interaction | Amino acid residues | Number of interaction | Amino acid residues | ||
| 1 | −7.10 | 4 | ILE31a, ASN140, SER245 | 5 | ILE31, THR97, THR101, VAL138, PRO250 |
| 2 | −6.98 | 7 | MET30a, ILE31, THR97, GLY99, ASN140a | 0 | – |
| 3 | −7.33 | 5 | PHE100a, ASN140a, SER245 | 6 | ILE31, ILE54a, VAL55, ALA98, ILE119 |
| 4 | −7.55 | 7 | SER28, ILE31, ASP53b, PHE100, ASN140 | 1 | THR101 |
| 5 | −7.66 | 8 | ILE31, GLY32, GLY99, PHE100, THR101, ASN140a, SER245 | 2 | THR97, THR101 |
| 6 | −8.53 | 8 | GLY29, ILE31a, ASP53a, ILE54, THR97, THR101 | 2 | MET30, ALA98 |
| 7 | −7.16 | 8 | PHE100, ARG109, ASN140a, ASN166, ARG171, SER245, PRO246 | 6 | THR101, TRP107a, ASN140, LEU167, ALA236 |
| 8 | −5.09 | 9 | GLY29, ILE31a, GLY32, THR97a, GLY99b | 0 | – |
| 9 | −8.91 | 8 | GLY29, GLY32, THR97, GLY99a, PHE100, THR101, ASN140 | 3 | THR101, LEU112, ASN140 |
| 10 | −6.64 | 5 | GLY29, ILE31, GLY32, THR97a | 2 | ILE31, THR101 |
| 11 | −6.55 | 7 | GLY29, GLY32, THR97, GLY99, PHE100, VAL138, PRO246 | 4 | ILE31, THR97, THR101, VAL138 |
| 12 | −7.89 | 6 | GLY99a, PHE100, ASN140, SER245a | 4 | ILE31a, LEU112, ASN140 |
| 13 | −6.88 | 6 | PHE52, ASP53, ILE54, GLY99a, LYS118 | 9 | VAL26, PHE52, ILE54a, ALA98, LYS118, ILE119, GLU122, ILE123 |
| 14 | −7.86 | 7 | GLY29, ILE31a, GLY32, THR97, GLY99a | 3 | ILE54, ALA98, THR101 |
| Artesunate | −11.21 | 7 | ILE31, GLY29, GLY32, ILE54a, THR97, GLY99 | 9 | VAL26, ILE31, PHE52, ILE54a, ALA98, THR101, ILE119a |
| Chloroquine | −6.65 | 1 | GLY99 | 6 | VAL26, ILE31a, PHE52, THR101, ILE119 |
aTwo interactions with amino acid residues
bThree interactions with amino acid residues
Fig. 2Predicted binding modes of active compounds, artesunate and chloroquine with PfLDH. The backbones of PfLDH enzyme are depicted in green ribbon models and all hydrogen bonding residues are shown as stick models and labeled by heteroatom; white for H, blue for N, red for O. Compounds are labeled by heteroatom; yellow for C, brown for H, cyan for N, magenta for O. Hydrogen bond interactions are shown as red dash lines and represent bond length in angstrom (A°). a Artesunate. b Chloroquine. c 3,5-Dimethoxyquercetin. d Quercetin. e 2,4,3′,5′-Tetrahydroxybibenzyl. f Quercetin-3-O-β-D-galactopyranoside
Fig. 3Superimposed structures of the docked conformations of flavonoid compounds with amino acid residues of PfLDH. 3,5-Dimethoxyquercetin (4; purple), (+)-catechin (5; magenta), quercetin (6; cyan), kaempferol (7; green) and myricetin (11; yellow). Hydrogen bond interactions are shown as red dashed lines