Arsenic Induced Oxidative Neural-Damages in Rat are Mitigated by Tea-Leave Extract via MMPs and AChE Inactivation, Shown by Molecular Docking and in Vitro Studies with Pure Theaflavin and AChE

Background: Chronic arsenic-exposure causes neuromuscular disorders and other health anomalies. Damage to DNA and cytoskeletal/extracellular matrix is brought on by reactive-oxygen-species (ROS)-induced intrinsic antioxidant depletion (thiols/urate). Therapeutic chelating-agents have multiple side-e...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cell biochemistry and biophysics 2024-09, Vol.82 (3), p.2567-2583
Hauptverfasser: Medda, Nandita, Maiti, Sayantani, Acharyya, Nirmallya, Samanta, Tanmoy, Banerjee, Amrita, De, Subrata Kr, Ghosh, Tamal Kanti, Maiti, Smarajit
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background: Chronic arsenic-exposure causes neuromuscular disorders and other health anomalies. Damage to DNA and cytoskeletal/extracellular matrix is brought on by reactive-oxygen-species (ROS)-induced intrinsic antioxidant depletion (thiols/urate). Therapeutic chelating-agents have multiple side-effects. Objectives: The protection of ( Camellia sinensis ) tea-extract and role of uric-acid (UA) or allopurinol (urate-depletor) on arsenic-toxicity were verified in rat model. Methods: Camellia sinensis (CS dry-leaves), UA or allopurinol was supplemented to arsenic-intoxicated rats for 4-weeks. Purified theaflavins and their galloyl-ester were tested in-vitro on pure AChE (acetylcholinesterase) and their PDB/PubChem 3-D structures were utilized for in-silico binding studies. The primary chemical components were evaluated from CS-extracts. Biochemical analysis, PAGE-zymogram, DNA-stability comet analysis, HE-staining was performed in arsenic-exposed rat brain tissues. Results: Animals exposed to arsenic showed symptoms of erratic locomotion, decreased intrinsic antioxidants (catalase/SOD1/uric acid), increased AChE, and malondialdehyde. Cerebellar and cerebrum tissue damages were shown with increased levels of matrix-metalloprotease (MMP2/9) and DNA damage (comets). Allopurinol- supplemented group demonstrated somewhat similar biochemical responses. In the CS-group brain tissues especially cerebellum is considerably protected which is evident from endogenous antioxidant and DNA and cytoskeleton protection with concomitant inactivation of MMPs and AChE. Present study indicates theaflavin-digallate (TFDG) demonstrated the highest inhibition of purified AChE (IC 50  = 2.19 µg/ml with the lowest binding free-energy; −369.87 kcal/mol) followed by TFMG (IC 50  = 3.86 µg/ml, −347.06 kcal/mol) suggesting their possible restoring effects of cholinergic response. Conclusions: Favorable responses in UA-group and adverse outcome in allo-group justify the neuro-protective effects of UA as an endogenous antioxidant. Role of flavon-gallate in neuro protection mechanism may be further studied.
ISSN:1085-9195
1559-0283
1559-0283
DOI:10.1007/s12013-024-01369-8