Frontiers in Plant Science (Dec 2023)

HPLC method for quantifying verbascoside in Stizophyllum perforatum and assessment of verbascoside acute toxicity and antileishmanial activity

  • Osvaine Junior Alvarenga Alves,
  • Saulo Duarte Ozelin,
  • Larissa Fernandes Magalhães,
  • Ana Carolina Bolela Bovo Candido,
  • Valéria Maria Melleiro Gimenez,
  • Valéria Maria Melleiro Gimenez,
  • Márcio Luís Andrade e Silva,
  • Wilson Roberto Cunha,
  • Ana Helena Januário,
  • Denise Crispim Tavares,
  • Lizandra Guidi Magalhães,
  • Patricia Mendonça Pauletti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2023.1324680
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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We report the chemical composition of the crude leaf extracts obtained from Stizophyllum perforatum (Cham.) Miers (Bignoniaceae), a simple high-performance liquid chromatography–diode array detection (HPLC-DAD) method based on mangiferin as an internal standard to quantify verbascoside, and the verbascoside acute oral toxicity and antileishmanial activity. HPLC–high-resolution mass spectrometry–DAD (HPLC–HRMS–DAD) analyses of the crude ethanol S. perforatum leaf extracts (CE-1 and CE-2) revealed that verbascoside was the major constituent in both extracts. CE-1 was purified, and verbascoside and casticin, among other compounds, were isolated. The developed HPLC-DAD method was validated and met the required standards. Investigation of the CE-2 acute toxicity indicated a lethal dose (LD50) greater than 2,000 mg/kg of body weight. Both CE-1 and CE-2 exhibited antileishmanial activity. The isolated compounds, verbascoside and casticin, also displayed antileishmanial activity with effective concentrations (IC50) of 6.23 and 24.20 µM against promastigote forms and 3.71 and 18.97 µM against amastigote forms of Leishmania amazonensis, respectively, but they were not cytotoxic to J774A.1 macrophages. Scanning electron microscopy of the L. amazonensis promastigotes showed that the parasites became more rounded and that their plasma membrane was altered in the presence of verbascoside. Additionally, transmission electron microscopy demonstrated that vacuoles emerged, lipids accumulated, kinetoplast size increased, and interstitial extravasation occurred in L. amazonensis promastigotes exposed to verbascoside. These findings suggest that S. perforatum is a promising candidate for further in vivo investigations against L. amazonensis.

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