Hippeastrum reticulatum (Amaryllidaceae) : alkaloid profiling, biological activities and molecular docking
Fecha
2017Autor
Materia
Abstract
The Amaryllidaceae family has proven to be a rich source of active compounds, which are characterized by unique skeleton arrangements and a broad spectrum of biological activities. The aim of this work was to perform the first detailed study of the alkaloid constituents of Hippeastrum reticulatum (Amaryllidaceae) and to determine the anti-parasitological and cholinesterase (AChE and BuChE) inhibitory activities of the epimers (6 -hydroxymaritidine and 6 -hydroxymaritidine). Twelve alkaloids wer ...
The Amaryllidaceae family has proven to be a rich source of active compounds, which are characterized by unique skeleton arrangements and a broad spectrum of biological activities. The aim of this work was to perform the first detailed study of the alkaloid constituents of Hippeastrum reticulatum (Amaryllidaceae) and to determine the anti-parasitological and cholinesterase (AChE and BuChE) inhibitory activities of the epimers (6 -hydroxymaritidine and 6 -hydroxymaritidine). Twelve alkaloids were identified in H. reticulatum: eight known alkaloids by GC-MS and four unknown (6 -hydroxymaritidine, 6 -hydroxymaritidine, reticulinine and isoreticulinine) by NMR. The epimer mixture (6 -hydroxymaritidine and 6 -hydroxymaritidine) showed low activity against all protozoan parasites tested and weak AChE-inhibitory activity. Finally, a molecular docking analysis of AChE and BuChE proteins showed that isoreticulinine may be classified as a potential inhibitory molecule since it can be stabilized in the active site through hydrogen bonds, - stacking and hydrophobic interactions. ...
En
Molecules. Basel, Switzerland. Vol. 22, no. 12 (2017), paper 2191
Origen
Estranjero
Colecciones
-
Artículos de Periódicos (39559)Ciencias de la Salud (10608)
Este ítem está licenciado en la Creative Commons License