Background: Monoamine oxidases (MAOs) are outer mitochondrial membrane flavoenzymes. They catalyze the oxidative deamination of a variety of neurotransmitters. MAO-A and MAO-B may be considered as targets for inhibitors to treat neurodegenerative diseases and depression and for managing symptoms associated with Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases.

Purpose: The objective was to evaluate the inhibitory effect of Hypericum afrum and Cytisus villosus against MAO-A and B and to isolate the compounds responsible for the MAO-inhibitory activity.

Methods: The inhibitory effect of extracts and purified constituents of H. afrum and C. villosus were investigated in vitro using recombinant human MAO-A and B, and through bioassay-guided fractionation of ethyl acetate fractions of areal parts of the two plants collected in northeastern Algeria. In addition, computational protein-ligand docking and molecular dynamics simulations were carried out to explain the MAO binding at the molecular level.

Results: The ethyl acetate (EtOAc) fractions of H. afrum and C. villosus showed the highest MAO inhibition activity against MAO A and B with IC values of 3.37 µg/ml and 13.50 µg/ml as well as 5.62 and 1.87 µg/ml, respectively. Bioassay-guided fractionation of the EtOAc fractions resulted in the purification and identification of the known flavonoids quercetin, myricetin, genistein and chrysin as the principal MAO-inhibitory constituents. Their structures were established by extensive 1 and 2D NMR studies and mass spectrometry. Quercetin, myricetin and chrysin showed potent inhibitory activity towards MAO-A with IC values of 1.52, 9.93 and 0.25 µM, respectively, while genistein more efficiently inhibited MAO-B (IC value: 0.65 µM). The kinetics of the inhibition and the study of dialysis dissociation of the complex of quercetin and myricetin and the isoenzyme MAO-A showed competitive and mixed inhibition, respectively. Both compounds showed reversible binding. Molecular docking experiments and molecular dynamics simulations allowed to estimate the binding poses and to identify the most important residues involved in the selective recognition of molecules in the MAOs enzymatic clefts.

Conclusion: Quercetin and myricetin isolated from H. afrum together with genistein and chrysin isolated from C. villosus have been identified as potent MAO-A and -B inhibitors. H. afrum and C. villosus have properties indicative of potential neuroprotective ability and may be new candidates for selective MAO-A and B inhibitors.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5947877PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.phymed.2017.12.032DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

quercetin myricetin
16
afrum villosus
12
bioassay-guided fractionation
8
ethyl acetate
8
molecular dynamics
8
dynamics simulations
8
binding molecular
8
etoac fractions
8
genistein chrysin
8
mao-a inhibitors
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!