Essential oils of Uvaria boniana – chemical composition, in vitro bioactivity, docking, and in silico ADMET profiling of selective major compounds
Author:
Ninh The Son1, Le Tuan Anh2, Dinh Thi Thu Thuy3, Nguyen Dinh Luyen3, Tran Thi Tuyen34, Pham-The Hai5ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Institute of Chemistry, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology (VAST) , 18 Hoang Quoc Viet, Caugiay , Hanoi , Vietnam 2. Mien Trung Institute for Scientific Research , VAST , Hanoi , Vietnam 3. Institute of Natural Products Chemistry, VAST , Hanoi , Vietnam 4. Graduate University of Science and Technology, VAST , Hanoi , Vietnam 5. Hanoi University of Pharmacy , 13–15 Le Thanh Tong, Hoan Kiem , Hanoi , Vietnam
Abstract
Abstract
Phytochemical investigation applying GC (gas chromatography)-MS (mass spectrometry)/GC-FID (flame ionization detection) on the hydro-distilled essential oils of the Vietnamese medicinal plant Uvaria boniana leaf and twig lead to the detection of 35 constituents (97.36%) in the leaf oil and 52 constituents (98.75%) in the twig oil. Monoterpenes, monoterpenoids, sesquiterpenes, and sesquiterpenoids were characteristic of U. boniana essential oils. The leaf oil was represented by major components (E)-caryophyllene (16.90%), bicyclogermacrene (15.95%), α-humulene (14.96%), and linalool (12.40%), whereas four compounds α-cadinol (16.16%), epi-α-muurolol (10.19%), α-pinene (11.01%), and β-pinene (8.08%) were the main ones in the twig oil. As compared with the leaf oil, the twig oil was better in antimicrobial activity. With the same MIC value of 40 mg/mL, the twig oil successfully controlled the growth of Gram (+) bacterium Bacillus subtilis, Gram (−) bacterium Escherichia coli, fungus Aspergillus niger, and yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In addition, both two oil samples have induced antiinflammatory activity with the IC50 values of 223.7–240.6 mg/mL in NO productive inhibition when BV2 cells had been stimulated by LPS. Docking simulations of four major compounds of U. boniana twig oil on eight relevant antibacterial targets revealed that epi-α-muurolol and α-cadinol are moderate inhibitors of E. coli DNA gyrase subunit B, penicillin binding protein 2X and penicillin binding protein 3 of Pseudomonas aeruginosa with similar free binding energies of −30.1, −29.3, and −29.3 kJ/mol, respectively. Furthermore, in silico ADMET studies indicated that all four docked compounds have acceptable oral absorption, low metabolism, and appropriated toxicological profile to be considered further as drug candidates.
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Subject
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
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