Inhibition of collagen fibrillation by small molecules is of growing interest to develop therapeutics for the illnesses related to excess deposition of collagen. In this context, we have studied the inhibitory effect of N-Vanillylnonanamide (NVA), a natural product from capsicum oleoresin and an analog of capsaicin (a known inhibitor of collagen fibrillation), on collagen self-assembly that leads to fibrillation in vitro. Commercially, capsaicin was found to be expensive than NVA. Therefore, it would be an advantage economically if NVA could display a similar/better inhibitory activity compared to capsaicin. The conventional turbidity measurements indicate that NVA completely inhibits collagen fibrillation at body temperature (37 °C) and its inhibition were concentration-dependent. The inhibition efficiency was observed to reduce at room temperature (25 °C). NVA protects the triple helical structure of collagen while it increases the thermal stability of collagen compared to collagen alone. Fluorescence results suggest that NVA binds in both telopeptide and triple helical regions of collagen and thereby prevents collagen self-assembly. The present results thus indicate that NVA is a potential inhibitor and, economically, it could be a better choice as a therapeutic agent compared to capsaicin in evolving treatment for disorders associated with excessive collagen deposition.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2019.11.148 | DOI Listing |
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