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Sour Tamarind Is More Antihypertensive than the Sweeter One, as Evidenced by In Vivo Biochemical Indexes, Ligand–Protein Interactions, Multitarget Interactions, and Molecular Dynamic Simulation

This research investigated the antihypertensive effects of tamarind products and compared their potentials based on an animal model’s data verified by molecular docking, multitarget interactions, and dynamic simulation assays. GC-MS-characterized tamarind products were administered to cholesterol-in...

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Autores principales: Akter, Taslima, Bulbul, Md. Rakibul Hassan, Sama-ae, Imran, Azadi, M. A., Nira, Kamrun Nahar, Al-Araby, Salahuddin Quader, Deen, Jobaier Ibne, Rafi, Md. Khalid Juhani, Saha, Srabonti, Ezaj, Md. Muzahid Ahmed, Rahman, Md. Atiar
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10420995/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37571339
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu15153402
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author Akter, Taslima
Bulbul, Md. Rakibul Hassan
Sama-ae, Imran
Azadi, M. A.
Nira, Kamrun Nahar
Al-Araby, Salahuddin Quader
Deen, Jobaier Ibne
Rafi, Md. Khalid Juhani
Saha, Srabonti
Ezaj, Md. Muzahid Ahmed
Rahman, Md. Atiar
author_facet Akter, Taslima
Bulbul, Md. Rakibul Hassan
Sama-ae, Imran
Azadi, M. A.
Nira, Kamrun Nahar
Al-Araby, Salahuddin Quader
Deen, Jobaier Ibne
Rafi, Md. Khalid Juhani
Saha, Srabonti
Ezaj, Md. Muzahid Ahmed
Rahman, Md. Atiar
author_sort Akter, Taslima
collection PubMed
description This research investigated the antihypertensive effects of tamarind products and compared their potentials based on an animal model’s data verified by molecular docking, multitarget interactions, and dynamic simulation assays. GC-MS-characterized tamarind products were administered to cholesterol-induced hypertensive albino rat models. The two-week-intervened animals were dissected to collect their serum and organs and respectively subjected to analyses of their hypertension-linked markers and tissue architectures. The lead biometabolites of tamarinds interacted with eight target receptors in the molecular docking and dynamic simulation studies and with multitarget in the network pharmacological analyses. The results show that the serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alkaline phosphatase (ALP), C-reactive protein (CRP), troponin I, and lipid profiles were maximally reinstated by the phenolic-enriched ripened sour tamarind extract compared to the sweet one, but the seed extracts had a smaller influence. Among the tamarind’s biometabolites, ϒ-sitosterol was found to be the best ligand to interact with the guanylate cyclase receptor, displaying the best drug-likeliness with the highest binding energy, −9.3 Kcal. A multitargeted interaction-based degree algorithm and a phylogenetic tree of pathways showed that the NR3C1, REN, PPARG, and CYP11B1 hub genes were consistently modulated by ϒ-sitosterol to reduce hypertension and related risk factors. The dynamic simulation study showed that the P-RMSD values of ϒ-sitosterol–guanylate cyclase were stable between 75.00 and 100.00 ns at the binding pocket. The findings demonstrate that ripened sour tamarind extract may be a prospective antihypertensive nutraceutical or supplement target affirmed through advanced preclinical and clinical studies.
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spelling pubmed-104209952023-08-12 Sour Tamarind Is More Antihypertensive than the Sweeter One, as Evidenced by In Vivo Biochemical Indexes, Ligand–Protein Interactions, Multitarget Interactions, and Molecular Dynamic Simulation Akter, Taslima Bulbul, Md. Rakibul Hassan Sama-ae, Imran Azadi, M. A. Nira, Kamrun Nahar Al-Araby, Salahuddin Quader Deen, Jobaier Ibne Rafi, Md. Khalid Juhani Saha, Srabonti Ezaj, Md. Muzahid Ahmed Rahman, Md. Atiar Nutrients Article This research investigated the antihypertensive effects of tamarind products and compared their potentials based on an animal model’s data verified by molecular docking, multitarget interactions, and dynamic simulation assays. GC-MS-characterized tamarind products were administered to cholesterol-induced hypertensive albino rat models. The two-week-intervened animals were dissected to collect their serum and organs and respectively subjected to analyses of their hypertension-linked markers and tissue architectures. The lead biometabolites of tamarinds interacted with eight target receptors in the molecular docking and dynamic simulation studies and with multitarget in the network pharmacological analyses. The results show that the serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alkaline phosphatase (ALP), C-reactive protein (CRP), troponin I, and lipid profiles were maximally reinstated by the phenolic-enriched ripened sour tamarind extract compared to the sweet one, but the seed extracts had a smaller influence. Among the tamarind’s biometabolites, ϒ-sitosterol was found to be the best ligand to interact with the guanylate cyclase receptor, displaying the best drug-likeliness with the highest binding energy, −9.3 Kcal. A multitargeted interaction-based degree algorithm and a phylogenetic tree of pathways showed that the NR3C1, REN, PPARG, and CYP11B1 hub genes were consistently modulated by ϒ-sitosterol to reduce hypertension and related risk factors. The dynamic simulation study showed that the P-RMSD values of ϒ-sitosterol–guanylate cyclase were stable between 75.00 and 100.00 ns at the binding pocket. The findings demonstrate that ripened sour tamarind extract may be a prospective antihypertensive nutraceutical or supplement target affirmed through advanced preclinical and clinical studies. MDPI 2023-07-31 /pmc/articles/PMC10420995/ /pubmed/37571339 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu15153402 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Akter, Taslima
Bulbul, Md. Rakibul Hassan
Sama-ae, Imran
Azadi, M. A.
Nira, Kamrun Nahar
Al-Araby, Salahuddin Quader
Deen, Jobaier Ibne
Rafi, Md. Khalid Juhani
Saha, Srabonti
Ezaj, Md. Muzahid Ahmed
Rahman, Md. Atiar
Sour Tamarind Is More Antihypertensive than the Sweeter One, as Evidenced by In Vivo Biochemical Indexes, Ligand–Protein Interactions, Multitarget Interactions, and Molecular Dynamic Simulation
title Sour Tamarind Is More Antihypertensive than the Sweeter One, as Evidenced by In Vivo Biochemical Indexes, Ligand–Protein Interactions, Multitarget Interactions, and Molecular Dynamic Simulation
title_full Sour Tamarind Is More Antihypertensive than the Sweeter One, as Evidenced by In Vivo Biochemical Indexes, Ligand–Protein Interactions, Multitarget Interactions, and Molecular Dynamic Simulation
title_fullStr Sour Tamarind Is More Antihypertensive than the Sweeter One, as Evidenced by In Vivo Biochemical Indexes, Ligand–Protein Interactions, Multitarget Interactions, and Molecular Dynamic Simulation
title_full_unstemmed Sour Tamarind Is More Antihypertensive than the Sweeter One, as Evidenced by In Vivo Biochemical Indexes, Ligand–Protein Interactions, Multitarget Interactions, and Molecular Dynamic Simulation
title_short Sour Tamarind Is More Antihypertensive than the Sweeter One, as Evidenced by In Vivo Biochemical Indexes, Ligand–Protein Interactions, Multitarget Interactions, and Molecular Dynamic Simulation
title_sort sour tamarind is more antihypertensive than the sweeter one, as evidenced by in vivo biochemical indexes, ligand–protein interactions, multitarget interactions, and molecular dynamic simulation
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10420995/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37571339
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu15153402
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