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Phloroglucinol as a Potential Candidate against Trypanosoma congolense Infection: Insights from In Vivo, In Vitro, Molecular Docking and Molecular Dynamic Simulation Analyses

Sub-Saharan Africa is profoundly challenged with African Animal Trypanosomiasis and the available trypanocides are faced with drawbacks, necessitating the search for novel agents. Herein, the chemotherapeutic potential of phloroglucinol on T. congolense infection and its inhibitory effects on the pa...

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Autores principales: Abdulrashid, Nasirudeen Idowu, Aminu, Suleiman, Adamu, Rahma Muhammad, Tajuddeen, Nasir, Isah, Murtala Bindawa, Jatau, Isa Danladi, Aliyu, Abubakar Babando, Simelane, Mthokozisi Blessing Cedric, Onyike, Elewechi, Ibrahim, Mohammed Auwal
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8781988/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35056785
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules27020469
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author Abdulrashid, Nasirudeen Idowu
Aminu, Suleiman
Adamu, Rahma Muhammad
Tajuddeen, Nasir
Isah, Murtala Bindawa
Jatau, Isa Danladi
Aliyu, Abubakar Babando
Simelane, Mthokozisi Blessing Cedric
Onyike, Elewechi
Ibrahim, Mohammed Auwal
author_facet Abdulrashid, Nasirudeen Idowu
Aminu, Suleiman
Adamu, Rahma Muhammad
Tajuddeen, Nasir
Isah, Murtala Bindawa
Jatau, Isa Danladi
Aliyu, Abubakar Babando
Simelane, Mthokozisi Blessing Cedric
Onyike, Elewechi
Ibrahim, Mohammed Auwal
author_sort Abdulrashid, Nasirudeen Idowu
collection PubMed
description Sub-Saharan Africa is profoundly challenged with African Animal Trypanosomiasis and the available trypanocides are faced with drawbacks, necessitating the search for novel agents. Herein, the chemotherapeutic potential of phloroglucinol on T. congolense infection and its inhibitory effects on the partially purified T. congolense sialidase and phospholipase A(2) (PLA(2)) were investigated. Treatment with phloroglucinol for 14 days significantly (p < 0.05) suppressed T. congolense proliferation, increased animal survival and ameliorated anemia induced by the parasite. Using biochemical and histopathological analyses, phloroglucinol was found to prevent renal damages and splenomegaly, besides its protection against T. congolense-associated increase in free serum sialic acids in infected animals. Moreover, the compound inhibited bloodstream T. congolense sialidase via mixed inhibition pattern with inhibition binding constant (Ki) of 0.181 µM, but a very low uncompetitive inhibitory effects against PLA(2) (Ki > 9000 µM) was recorded. Molecular docking studies revealed binding energies of −4.9 and −5.3 kcal/mol between phloroglucinol with modeled sialidase and PLA(2) respectively, while a 50 ns molecular dynamics simulation using GROMACS revealed the sialidase-phloroglucinol complex to be more compact and stable with higher free binding energy (−67.84 ± 0.50 kJ/mol) than PLA(2)-phloroglucinol complex (−77.17 ± 0.52 kJ/mol), based on MM-PBSA analysis. The sialidase-phloroglucinol complex had a single hydrogen bond interaction with Ser453 while none was observed for the PLA(2)-phloroglucinol complex. In conclusion, phloroglucinol showed moderate trypanostatic activity with great potential in ameliorating some of the parasite-induced pathologies and its anti-anemic effects might be linked to inhibition of sialidase rather than PLA(2).
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spelling pubmed-87819882022-01-22 Phloroglucinol as a Potential Candidate against Trypanosoma congolense Infection: Insights from In Vivo, In Vitro, Molecular Docking and Molecular Dynamic Simulation Analyses Abdulrashid, Nasirudeen Idowu Aminu, Suleiman Adamu, Rahma Muhammad Tajuddeen, Nasir Isah, Murtala Bindawa Jatau, Isa Danladi Aliyu, Abubakar Babando Simelane, Mthokozisi Blessing Cedric Onyike, Elewechi Ibrahim, Mohammed Auwal Molecules Article Sub-Saharan Africa is profoundly challenged with African Animal Trypanosomiasis and the available trypanocides are faced with drawbacks, necessitating the search for novel agents. Herein, the chemotherapeutic potential of phloroglucinol on T. congolense infection and its inhibitory effects on the partially purified T. congolense sialidase and phospholipase A(2) (PLA(2)) were investigated. Treatment with phloroglucinol for 14 days significantly (p < 0.05) suppressed T. congolense proliferation, increased animal survival and ameliorated anemia induced by the parasite. Using biochemical and histopathological analyses, phloroglucinol was found to prevent renal damages and splenomegaly, besides its protection against T. congolense-associated increase in free serum sialic acids in infected animals. Moreover, the compound inhibited bloodstream T. congolense sialidase via mixed inhibition pattern with inhibition binding constant (Ki) of 0.181 µM, but a very low uncompetitive inhibitory effects against PLA(2) (Ki > 9000 µM) was recorded. Molecular docking studies revealed binding energies of −4.9 and −5.3 kcal/mol between phloroglucinol with modeled sialidase and PLA(2) respectively, while a 50 ns molecular dynamics simulation using GROMACS revealed the sialidase-phloroglucinol complex to be more compact and stable with higher free binding energy (−67.84 ± 0.50 kJ/mol) than PLA(2)-phloroglucinol complex (−77.17 ± 0.52 kJ/mol), based on MM-PBSA analysis. The sialidase-phloroglucinol complex had a single hydrogen bond interaction with Ser453 while none was observed for the PLA(2)-phloroglucinol complex. In conclusion, phloroglucinol showed moderate trypanostatic activity with great potential in ameliorating some of the parasite-induced pathologies and its anti-anemic effects might be linked to inhibition of sialidase rather than PLA(2). MDPI 2022-01-12 /pmc/articles/PMC8781988/ /pubmed/35056785 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules27020469 Text en © 2022 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
Abdulrashid, Nasirudeen Idowu
Aminu, Suleiman
Adamu, Rahma Muhammad
Tajuddeen, Nasir
Isah, Murtala Bindawa
Jatau, Isa Danladi
Aliyu, Abubakar Babando
Simelane, Mthokozisi Blessing Cedric
Onyike, Elewechi
Ibrahim, Mohammed Auwal
Phloroglucinol as a Potential Candidate against Trypanosoma congolense Infection: Insights from In Vivo, In Vitro, Molecular Docking and Molecular Dynamic Simulation Analyses
title Phloroglucinol as a Potential Candidate against Trypanosoma congolense Infection: Insights from In Vivo, In Vitro, Molecular Docking and Molecular Dynamic Simulation Analyses
title_full Phloroglucinol as a Potential Candidate against Trypanosoma congolense Infection: Insights from In Vivo, In Vitro, Molecular Docking and Molecular Dynamic Simulation Analyses
title_fullStr Phloroglucinol as a Potential Candidate against Trypanosoma congolense Infection: Insights from In Vivo, In Vitro, Molecular Docking and Molecular Dynamic Simulation Analyses
title_full_unstemmed Phloroglucinol as a Potential Candidate against Trypanosoma congolense Infection: Insights from In Vivo, In Vitro, Molecular Docking and Molecular Dynamic Simulation Analyses
title_short Phloroglucinol as a Potential Candidate against Trypanosoma congolense Infection: Insights from In Vivo, In Vitro, Molecular Docking and Molecular Dynamic Simulation Analyses
title_sort phloroglucinol as a potential candidate against trypanosoma congolense infection: insights from in vivo, in vitro, molecular docking and molecular dynamic simulation analyses
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8781988/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35056785
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules27020469
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