Synthesis, characterization, and in vitro-in ovo toxicological screening of silibinin fatty acids conjugates as prodrugs with potential biomedical applications.

Biomol Biomed

Faculty of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, "Victor Babes" University of Medicine and Pharmacy Timisoara, Timisoara, Romania; Department of Oncology and Hematology, "Louis Turcanu" Emergency Clinical Hospital for Children, Timisoara, Romania.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Silibinin (SIL) from Silybum marianum has beneficial effects but suffers from low stability and bioavailability, prompting the research into its derivatives, silibilin oleate (SIL-O) and silibilin linoleate (SIL-L), as prodrugs for better biomedical applications.
  • Characterization techniques like DFT calculations and NMR confirmed the successful formation of SIL-O and SIL-L, showing they have lower drug-likeness scores than SIL but still a positive overall drug score with no severe side effects expected.
  • While SIL-O showed no toxicity at low concentrations, SIL-L was more toxic at high doses, particularly affecting certain cell types and demonstrating a slight irritant effect; thus,

Article Abstract

Silibinin (SIL), the most active phytocompound from Silybum marianum (L.), exerts many biological effects but has low stability and bioavailability. To overcome these drawbacks, the current research proposed the synthesis of silibilin oleate (SIL-O) and silibilin linoleate (SIL-L) derivatives as prodrugs with potentially optimized properties for biomedical applications, and the establishment of their in vitro-in ovo safety profiles. The physicochemical characterization of the obtained compounds using density functional theory (DFT) calculations, and Raman and 1H liquid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy confirmed the formation of SIL-O and SIL-L complexes. Computational predictions revealed that these lipophilic derivatives present a lower drug-likeness score (-29.96 for SIL-O and -23.55 for SIL-L) compared to SIL, but an overall positive drug score (0.07) and no risk for severe adverse effects. SIL-O and SIL-L showed no cytotoxicity or impairment in cell migration at low concentrations, but at the highest concentration (100 μM), they displayed distinct toxicological profiles. SIL-L was more cytotoxic (on cardiomyoblasts - H9c2(2-1), hepatocytes - HepaRG, and keratinocytes - HaCaT) than SIL-O or SIL, significantly inhibiting cell viability (<60%), altering cellular morphology, reducing cell confluence (<70%), and inducing prominent apoptotic-like nuclear features. At the concentration of 100 μM, SIL-O presented an irritation score (IS) of 0.61, indicating a lack of irritant effect on the chorioallantoic membrane (CAM), while SIL-L was classified as a slight irritant with an IS of 1.99. These findings outline a more favorable in vitro and in ovo biocompatibility for SIL-O compared to SIL L, whose applications are dosage limited due to potential toxicity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11496873PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.17305/bb.2024.10600DOI Listing

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