Bakkenolides and Caffeoylquinic Acids from the Aerial Portion of Petasites japonicus and Their Bacterial Neuraminidase Inhibition Ability

have been used since a long time in folk medicine to treat diseases including plague, pestilential fever, allergy, and inflammation in East Asia and European countries. Bioactive compounds that may prevent and treat infectious diseases are identified based on their ability to inhibit bacterial neura...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biomolecules (Basel, Switzerland) Switzerland), 2020-06, Vol.10 (6), p.888
Hauptverfasser: Woo, Hyun Sim, Shin, Kyung-Chul, Kim, Jeong Yoon, Kim, Yeong-Su, Ban, Young Jun, Oh, Yu Jin, Cho, Hae Jin, Oh, Deok-Kun, Kim, Dae Wook
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:have been used since a long time in folk medicine to treat diseases including plague, pestilential fever, allergy, and inflammation in East Asia and European countries. Bioactive compounds that may prevent and treat infectious diseases are identified based on their ability to inhibit bacterial neuraminidase (NA). We aimed to isolate and identify bioactive compounds from leaves and stems of (PJA) and elucidate their mechanisms of NA inhibition. Key bioactive compounds of PJA responsible for NA inhibition were isolated using column chromatography, their chemical structures revealed using H NMR, C NMR, DEPT, and HMBC, and identified to be bakkenolide B ( ), bakkenolide D ( ), 1,5-di- -caffeoylquinic acid ( ), and 5- -caffeoylquinic acid ( ). Of these, exhibited the most potent NA inhibitory activity (IC = 2.3 ± 0.4 μM). Enzyme kinetic studies revealed that and were competitive inhibitors, whereas exhibited non-competitive inhibition. Furthermore, a molecular docking simulation revealed the binding affinity of these compounds to NA and their mechanism of inhibition. Negative-binding energies indicated high proximity of these compounds to the active site and allosteric sites of NA. Therefore, PJA has the potential to be further developed as an antibacterial agent for use against diseases associated with NA.
ISSN:2218-273X
2218-273X
DOI:10.3390/biom10060888