Hemisynthesis, Anti-Inflammatory, and In-silico Alpha-Amylase Inhibition of Novel Carlina Oxide Analogs
- Autores: Hammoudi A.1, Zatla A.1, Mami I.1, Pérard J.2, Dib M.3
-
Afiliações:
- Laboratory of Organic Chemistry, Natural Substances and Analyzes (COSNA), University of Tlemcen
- Faculty of Pharmacyde Pharmacie, Paris Descartes University
- Laboratory of Natural and Bioactive Substances (LASNABIO), University of Tlemcen
- Edição: Volume 18, Nº 4 (2024)
- Páginas: 249-258
- Seção: Biochemistry
- URL: https://ter-arkhiv.ru/2212-7968/article/view/643941
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.2174/0122127968313911241007040045
- ID: 643941
Citar
Texto integral
Resumo
Background:Numerous natural products have been successfully developed for clinical use in the treatment of human diseases in almost every therapeutic area.
Objective:This work aimed to synthesize some new analogs of Carlina oxide by functionalizing the fifth position of the furan by different acyl groups using the Friedel-Crafts acylation approach. The synthetic analogs and carlina oxide were then assessed for their in-vitro anti-inflammatory activity and in-silico alpha-amylase inhibition effect.
Methods:The new analogs were synthesized at room temperature using different anhydrides with the presence of boron trifluoride diethyl etherate (BF3-Et2O) as an acid catalyst. A protein denaturation assay was performed to evaluate the anti-inflammatory activity, while the in-silico study was conducted using the Molecular Operating Environment (MOE) with different types of alphaamylase sources, such as human salivary pancreatic alpha-amylase and Aspergillus oryzae alphaamylase (PDB: 1Q4N, 5EMY, 7P4W respectively).
Results:A total of four analogs of carlina oxide were obtained in yields of 60-7% and then identified with 1H and 13C NMR analysis. Additionally, analog 1 exhibited a better anti-inflammatory effect with an IC50 of 0.280 mg/mL. However, the in-silico study showed that all the synthetic analogs have different interactions with human salivary alpha-amylase (1Q4N) and other interactions with 5EMY and 7P4W.
Conclusion:The new analogs of Carlina oxide have the potential to serve as an alternative agent for alpha-amylase inhibition, contributing to the reduction of postprandial hyperglycemia.
Sobre autores
Amina Hammoudi
Laboratory of Organic Chemistry, Natural Substances and Analyzes (COSNA), University of Tlemcen
Email: info@benthamscience.net
Amina Zatla
Laboratory of Organic Chemistry, Natural Substances and Analyzes (COSNA), University of Tlemcen
Email: info@benthamscience.net
Imane Mami
Laboratory of Organic Chemistry, Natural Substances and Analyzes (COSNA), University of Tlemcen
Email: info@benthamscience.net
Joëlle Pérard
Faculty of Pharmacyde Pharmacie, Paris Descartes University
Email: info@benthamscience.net
Mohamed Dib
Laboratory of Natural and Bioactive Substances (LASNABIO), University of Tlemcen
Autor responsável pela correspondência
Email: info@benthamscience.net
Arquivos suplementares
