Pharmaceutical Biology (Jan 2017)

Pharmacological evaluation of 2-angeloyl ent-dihydrotucumanoic acid

  • Marco Martin González-Chávez,
  • Victor Arana-Argáez,
  • Juan Ramón Zapata-Morales,
  • Ana Karen Ávila-Venegas,
  • Angel Josabad Alonso-Castro,
  • Mario Isiordia-Espinoza,
  • Roberto Martínez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/13880209.2016.1277766
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 55, no. 1
pp. 873 – 879

Abstract

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Context: Gymnosperma glutinosum (Spreng.) Less. (Asteraceae) is a bush used for the empirical treatment of pain, fever, and cancer. An ent-neo-clerodane diterpene (2-angeloyl ent-dihydrotumanoic acid; ADTA) was isolated from G. glutinosum. Objective: This study evaluates the cytotoxic, anti-inflammatory, and antinociceptive effects of ADTA. Materials and methods: The cytotoxic effects of ADTA (1–350 μM) were evaluated using the MTT assay with human tumorigenic (SW-620, MDA-MB231, SKLU1, SiHa, and PC-3), and non-tumorigenic (HaCaT) cells for 48 h. The in vitro anti-inflammatory effects of ADTA (0.23–460 μM) were assessed using murine peritoneal macrophages stimulated with LPS and estimating the levels of pro-inflammatory mediators for 48 h. The antinociceptive effects of ADTA (25–100 mg/kg p.o.) were evaluated using two in vivo models of chemical-induced nociception during 1 h. Results: ADTA lacked cytotoxic activity (IC50> 100 μM) on tumorigenic cells. In non-tumorigenic cells (HaCaT), ADTA exerted low cytotoxic effects (IC50 = 273 μM). ADTA, at concentrations of 115 μM or higher, decreased the release of pro-inflammatory mediators. The maximum antinociceptive effects of ADTA in the acetic acid-induced abdominal constrictions by ADTA was found at 100 mg/kg (63%), whereas in the formalin test at phase 1 and phase 2, ADTA (100 mg/kg) decreased the licking time by 47 and 71%, respectively. Conclusion: The results indicate that ADTA, obtained from G. glutinosum, exerts moderate in vitro anti-inflammatory and in vivo antinociceptive effects, but lacks cytotoxic effects on human cancer cells.

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