International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Oct 2023)

Natural Compounds Purified from the Leaves of <i>Aristotelia chilensis</i>: Makomakinol, a New Alkaloid and the Effect of Aristoteline and Hobartine on Na<sub>V</sub> Channels

  • Rebeca Pérez,
  • Claudia Figueredo,
  • Viviana Burgos,
  • Jaime R. Cabrera-Pardo,
  • Bernd Schmidt,
  • Matthias Heydenreich,
  • Andreas Koch,
  • Jennifer R. Deuis,
  • Irina Vetter,
  • Cristian Paz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms242115504
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 21
p. 15504

Abstract

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Aristotelia chilensis or “maqui” is a tree native to Chile used in the folk medicine of the Mapuche people as an anti-inflammatory agent for the treatment of digestive ailments, fever, and skin lesions. Maqui fruits are black berries which are considered a “superfruit” with notable potential health benefits, promoted to be an antioxidant, cardioprotective, and anti-inflammatory. Maqui leaves contain non-iridoid monoterpene indole alkaloids which have previously been shown to act on nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, potassium channels, and calcium channels. Here, we isolated a new alkaloid from maqui leaves, now called makomakinol, together with the known alkaloids aristoteline, hobartine, and 3-formylindole. Moreover, the polyphenols quercetine, ethyl caffeate, and the terpenes, dihydro-β-ionone and terpin hydrate, were also obtained. In light of the reported analgesic and anti-nociceptive properties of A. chilensis, in particular a crude mixture of alkaloids containing aristoteline and hobartinol (PMID 21585384), we therefore evaluated the activity of aristoteline and hobartine on NaV1.8, a key NaV isoform involved in nociception, using automated whole-cell patch-clamp electrophysiology. Aristoteline and hobartine both inhibited Nav1.8 with an IC50 of 68 ± 3 µM and 54 ± 1 µM, respectively. Hobartine caused a hyperpolarizing shift of the voltage-dependence of the activation, whereas aristoteline did not change the voltage-dependence of the activation or inactivation. The inhibitory activity of these alkaloids on NaV channels may contribute to the reported analgesic properties of Aristotelia chilensis used by the Mapuche people.

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