Saudi Journal of Biological Sciences (Mar 2020)

Isolation, purification and characterization of naturally derived Crocetin beta-d-glucosyl ester from Crocus sativus L. against breast cancer and its binding chemistry with ER-alpha/HDAC2

  • Mudasir A. Mir,
  • Shabir Ahmad Ganai,
  • Sheikh Mansoor,
  • Sumira Jan,
  • P. Mani,
  • Khalid Z. Masoodi,
  • Henna Amin,
  • Muneeb U. Rehman,
  • Parvaiz Ahmad

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 3
pp. 975 – 984

Abstract

Read online

Saffron plant (Crocus sativus L.) is being used as a source of saffron spice and medicine to cure or prevent different types of diseases including cancers. We report the isolation, characterization of bioactive small molecule ([crocetin (β-d-glucosyl) ester] from the leaf biowastes of saffron plant of Kashmir, India. MTTC assay and Bio-autography aided approach were used to assess anti-oxidant activity and anti-cancer properties of crocin (s) against DPPH free radical and breast cancer cell line respectively. Crocetin beta-d-glucosyl ester restrained proliferation of human breast adeno-carcinoma cell model (MCF-7) without significantly affecting normal cell line (L-6). Further studies involving molecular mechanics generalized born surface area and molecular docking showed that crocetin beta-d-glucosyl ester exhibits strong affinity for estrogen receptor alpha and histone deacetylase 2 (crucial receptors involved in breast cancer signalling) as evidenced by the negative docking score and binding free energy (BFE) values. Therefore, crocetin beta-d-glucosyl ester from Crocus sativus biowastes showed antiproliferative effect possibly by inhibiting estrogen receptor alpha and HDAC2 mediated signalling cascade. Keywords: Saffron, Floral biowastes, Antioxidant, Crocetin beta-d-glucosyl ester, Breast cancer, Molecular docking