Background
Mahonia root and stem bark have long been considered to have anti-inflammatory, anti-bacterial, anti-fungal activity and they are used particularly for treatment of skin diseases [
1‐
4]. They are indicated for treatment of the eczema, psoriasis, and other skin conditions [
5].
Alkaloids representing the main compounds in
Mahonia aquifolium, belong to two major classes: the protoberberines and the bisbenzylisoquinolines (BBIQ). Through bioassay-guided fractionation, protoberberine alkaloids, such as berberine and jatrorrhizine, were isolated as the main active alkaloids responsible for the relevant effects in numerous studies conducted so far [
6‐
8]. In particular, the berberine was reported to exhibit a range of pharmacological and biological activities, and interest has been focused on its antioxidative potential. Berberine was found to inhibit the single-strand cleveage of DNA [
9]. It did exhibit a strong superoxide anion radical quenching ability rather than a strong hydroxyl radical scavenging activity [
9]. It was reported to exert a protective effect against ONOO
-, NO
., and O
2 .-, induced oxidative damage
in vitro and to increase cell viability [
10].
BBIQ alkaloids, such as berbamine, oxyacanthine, tetrandrine, have been reported to inhibit platelet activation, histamine release, superoxide generation by polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMNL), lipid peroxidation in some bio-membranes and suppress selectively receptor-mediated phospholipase A
2 activation, leading to the production of chemical mediators such as prostanoids and leukotrienes, arachidonic acid metabolites [
11,
12].
Lipoxygenases (LOXs) comprise a family of non-heme iron-containing dioxygenases, representing the key enzymes in the biosynthesis of leukotrienes that have been postulated to play an important role in the pathophysiology of several inflammatory and allergic diseases. The products of LOXs catalysed oxygenation (hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acids (HPETE), hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acids (HETE), leukotrienes and lipoxins) apparently are involved in the development of rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis, asthmatic responses and glomerular nephritis [
13].
In our study, the Mahonia crude stem bark extract and its fractions identified as tertiary phenolic BBIQ alkaloids (fraction I) and quaternary protoberberine alkaloids (fraction II) were assessed for their effect on the activity of 12-lipoxygenase (12-LOX), isolated from rat lung cytosolic fraction. Since the mechanism of the enzyme inhibition may include reduction of lipidperoxy- or lipidoxy-radicals, the effects of the samples tested on the 12-LOX activity were compared with their abilities to scavenge 1,1-diphenyl-2-picryl-hydrazyl (DPPH), a free stable radical. Two alkaloids (berberine and jatrorrhizine) isolated from fraction II were used as the standards in the in vitro assays.
Methods
Chemicals
α,α'-diphenyl-β-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) radicals were obtained from Sigma Chemical Co. (St Louis, MO, USA). Linoleic acid (99%, Sigma) was used as a substrate prepared in solubilized state as described [
14]. Other chemicals were purchased from local commercial sources and they were of analytical grade quality.
Preparation and analysis of Mahoniae stem-bark extract
Plant material
The stem-bark of cultivated Mahonia aquifolium was collected in October 2002 from Arboretum Mlynany, Faculty of Pharmacy, Bratislava. The authentic specimen is deposited in the herbarium at the Department of Pharmacognosy and Botany, Faculty of Pharmacy (No. Ma 108/9).
Mahonia stem-bark (Mahonia aquifolium (Pursh) Nutt.) was finely powdered and macerated with 62% ethanol (1:10, w/v) for 4 days at room temperature. After removal of the insoluble matter by filtration, the filtrate was concentrated under reduced pressure to yield a dark colored residue. The residue was then dissolved in 10% HCl and the yellow precipitate was filtered through filter paper, the filtrate being concentrated under reduced pressure (filtrate: water = 20:1, w/w). The remaining aqueous extract was crude Mahonia extract.
Fractionation of stem-bark extract Mahoniae
A solution of 25 % NH4OH was added to the remaining acidified extract so as to adjust its acidity to pH 8–10 and then it was extracted with diethyl ether (4 × 500 ml). The combined ether extract was evaporated up to dryness under reduced pressure and monitored by thin-layer chromatography so as to yield 6.80 g fraction I of ether- soluble BBIQ alkaloids fraction. The remaining aqueous extract was then acidified to pH 4–5 with 10% HCl and KI solution was added so that a precipitate of quaternary protoberberine alkaloids was obtained. The yellow coloured precipitate was extracted with CHCl3 (5 × 1000 ml). The combined chloroform extract was evaporated up to dryness and monitored by thin – layer chromatography, yielding in 19.9 g of chloroform-soluble quaternary protoberberine alkaloid iodide fraction (fraction II).
The yields of fraction I and II (concentrated under reduced pressure and then lyophilized to yield a residue) were 8.6 % and 36.8% w/w, respectively.
The filtrate of crude Mahonia extract was concentrated and then lyophilized to yield a residue. The extract yield was 25.6% of the original material weight.
Isolation of alkaloids from fraction II
Part of the quaternary protoberberine iodides (fraction II) was adsorbed on to silica gel and subjected to a silica gel column chromatography, eluted with chloroform, with the mixtures of chloroform – MeOH (2:1, 1:1. 1:2, 1:4) and MeOH, each about 200 ml with 6 fractions as a result. Fractions 2 and 3 were repeatedly chromatographed on the silica gel column and further purified by recrystalization from EtOH to yield the berberine and jatrorrhizine as iodides.
Structural analysis of isolated alkaloids
The isolated compounds were identified by direct comparison to the corresponding authentic samples [
15]. The purity (>95%) of the above compounds was checked by HPLC analysis [
16]. The amount of each alkaloid in the particular fractions was as follows, phenolic BBIQ alkaloids (fraction I): baluchistine 0.074% %, aquifoline 0.071%, oxyacanthine 0.048%, berbamine 0.042%, obamegine 0.038%, aromoline 0.005%, protoberberine alkaloids (fraction II): jatrorrhizine 0.146%, berberine 0.112%, palmatine 0.088%, columbamine 0.030% (w/w).
In vitro experiments
12-lipoxygenase inhibition assay
A cytosolic fraction from rat (Wistar, male 180 g) lungs representing a source of 12-lipoxygenase was isolated according to the procedure of Kulkarni et al. [
17]. The experiments with animals were performed in the laboratory complying Good Laboratory Practice certificate and according to the Law of the National Council of Slovak Republic on the protection of animals No. 115/1995, Edict of Ministry of Agriculture on the breeding of society animals, wild animals and dangerous animals and the protection of laboratory animals No 231/1998 and Council Directive 86/609/EEC on the approximation of laws, regulations and administrative provisions of the Member States regarding the protection of animals used for experimental and other scientific purposes
A spectrophotometric assay for determination of LOX activity was used, i.e. the reaction medium (2.0 ml final volume) contained 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 8.5), 100 mg of enzyme protein and a solution of linoleic acid prepared in solubilised state [
14]. The enzyme inhibitory effect was tested by adding different volumes of the stock solution (0.5 mg/ml) of the extract or fractions tested to the incubation mixture. The pure compounds were tested in final concentrations 15.10
6 – 25.10
-6 mol/l. The LOX activity was monitored as an increase of the absorbance at 234 nm what reflects the formation of hydroperoxylinoleic acid. The extinction coefficient of 25 mM
-1. cm
-1 was used for calculation of enzyme activity. The inhibitory effect of compounds tested was expressed as IC
50 and percentage of enzyme activity inhibition.
Radical scavenging assay
The free radical scavenging capacity of the compounds tested, crude extract and fractions was determined by using DPPH assay [
18‐
20]. The stock solutions of the samples were prepared in ethanol (0.8 mg/ml for the fractions; 0.47 mg/ml for the standard compounds) and in water (0.7 mg/ml) as far as the crude extract was concerned.
A total 100 μl sample was mixed with a 2900 μl ethanol solution of DPPH (final concentration 60 μM), and the reaction proceeded for 5 hours. After the reaction time, the absorbance change was measured at 515 nm by Hewlett-Packard Diode Array Spectrophotometer 8452A spectrophotometer. Measurements were performed at least triplicate. The standard curves for the reaction of Trolox with DPPH and the readings were then used for calculation of the total antioxidant capacity (TAC) of the sample tested, expressed in μg Trolox equivalents/g [
21].
Statistical analysis
Each experiment was performed in triplicate. Results are expressed as the means ± S.D. Statistical analysis was performed using unpaired Student's t-test using X-Plot v. 2.81 and statistical significance is expressed as *, p < 0.05.
Discussion
This study elucidates the possible contribution of the radical scavenging effect to the lipoxygenase inhibitory mechanism of the crude Mahonia aquifolium extract and two isolated alkaloid fractions, containing phenolic BBIQ alkaloids (fraction I) and protoberberine alkaloids (fraction II). Two representative alkaloids, jatrorrhizine, possessing phenolic moiety and its non-hydroxylated analogue, berberine, were isolated from fraction II and used in the assays of the antiradical and anti-lipoxygenase activity as standards.
LOXs are the family of the key enzyme in the biosynthesis of leukotrienes that are postulated to play an important role in the pathophysiology of several inflammatory disseases. According to the currently used nomenclature, the LOXs are classified with respect to their positional specificity of arachidonic acid oxygenation (5-LOX, 9-LOX, 12-LOX, 15-LOX) [
22].
In the present work, the LOX inhibitory properties were tested on purified arachidonate-12-LOX from rat lung cytosol fraction. 12-LOX metabolites of arachidonic acid are potent mediators of inflammation and one of the regulators of pulmonary vascular tone, and their production is increased during lungs vascular injury [
23]. 12-lipoxygenase products (12-HETE) are also potent mediators of cutaneous inflammation. These eicosanoids have been found in biologically active amounts in scales and samples of lesional psoriatic skin [
1].
LOX are sensitive to antioxidants, and the most common way of their action may consist in inhibition of lipid hydroperoxide formation due to scavenging of lipidoxy- or lipidperoxy-radicals formed in course of enzymic peroxidation. This can limit the availability of lipid hydroperoxide substrate necessary for the catalytic cycle of LOX.
An inhibition of the lipoxygenases by antioxidants can be also attained via chelation of its non-heme bound iron [
24] or by reduction of its ferric form [
25‐
27], suggesting a competitive kind of inhibition. However, non-competititve or mixed competitive/non-competitive inhibition of LOX was also shown for tocopherol acetate or β-carotene, respectively [
28].
In our previous studies, an LOX inhibition potential was obtained for series of the BBIQ alkaloids [
16], as well as the protoberberine and aporphine alkaloids [
29] and the values of enzyme inhibition showed a strong linear correlation with the antiperoxidant effects of the compounds tested. These results indicated that the mechanism of the LOX inhibition effect could be partly explained by direct reduction of peroxy- and alkoxy-radicals.
However, a simpler assay system is required to elucidate the role of a direct free radical scavenging in the lipoxygenase inhibition by
Mahonia aquifolium alkaloids, since in the previously used liposomal model of lipid peroxidation (induced by the Fenton system), the resulting effect may be considered as a superimposition of reactivity of the compounds with free radicals, chelation of Fe
2+ or partition process in the heterogeneous membrane system. For this reasons, we evaluated the consistency of anti-lipoxygenase activity of the samples tested with their reactivity with DPPH, a free radical model. DPPH is also considered as a good kinetic model for peroxyl radicals [
18‐
20].
In order to put the common parameter for comparison of the antiradical activity of the fractions and the crude extract with the pure compounds, we have evaluated the total antioxidant activity (TAC) [
21] of the samples tested. In consistency with our previous results [
30], the highest value of TAC was obtained for fraction I containing bisbenzylisoquinoline (BBIQ) alkaloids (baluchistine, aquifoline oxyacanthine, berbamine, obamegine, aromoline), possessing properties of phenolic antioxidants (Table
3). The crude extract and fraction II (containing protoberberine alkaloids with reduced number of free OH moieties) showed a remarkably lower and comparable antiradical activity. Contrary to the previously obtained results for lipid peroxidation and lipoxygenase inhibition assay [
17,
29], we obtained a remarkably low antiradical activity for the
Mahonia crude extract.
As shown in Table
1, the strongest lipoxygenase inhibition was obtained for the crude extract (IC
50 = 0.76.10
-3 ± 0.12.10
-3g/L). Although, analogously to TAC values, phenolic BBIQ fraction I showed the stronger LOX inhibition effect (IC
50 = 4.63 ± 1.03.10
-3gL) than protoberberine alkaloid fraction II (IC
50 = 6.1.10
-3 ± 0.98.10
-3g/L), the difference between their enzyme inhibition activities was not so remarkable as that between their antiradical activities.
These results suggest that a scavenging effect may not be a critical factor behind the inhibition of LOX by the crude Mahonia extract and its two fractions and the inhibitory effects are possibly due to specific interaction of the constituents with the enzyme. As mentioned above, an interaction with iron atom at the enzyme catalytic centre may be involved in the LOX inhibition mechanism. Regarding catecholic type of structures of
Mahonia aquifolium constituents, the LOX activity could be abolished via formation of stable chelates of its non-heme iron, as it has been shown for aporphine alkaloid, apomorphine [
31], suggesting thus a competitive mode of enzyme inhibition. This could also explain the good correlation between LOX inhibition effects of the Mahonia extract and its constituents and their protective effects against lipid peroxidation [
17,
29], exerted probably via interaction with Fe
2+ of the initiator system (FeSO
4/H
2O
2). However, regarding the size of BBIQ molecules, other types of inhibition involving preferential interaction with other than enzyme's catalytic cavity (i.e. allosteric, uncompetitive or non-competitive inhibition), cannot be excluded.
Expectably, a hydroxylated alkaloid jatrorrhizine showed three times higher antiradical reactivity expressed as TAC than its non-hydroxylated analogue, berberine (Table
3). The radical scavenging properties related to OH moiety on the alkaloid skeleton of jatrorrhizine may be also responsible for the increase of enzyme inhibitory effect (IC
50 = 17.5.10
-6 ± 1.27.10
-6 mol/L, Table
2) in comparison to berberine (IC
50 = 30.5.10
-6 ± 2.87.10
-6 mol/L), as indicated by the consistency with results of DPPH radical scavenging assay.
In conclusion, our results indicate that although the direct scavenging of free radicals cannot be ruled out in the mechanism of lipoxygenase inhibition by the Mahonia aquifolium extract and its two representative fractions containing BBIQ and protoberberine alkaloids, this does not seem to be the critical mechanism through which Mahonia aquifolium and its constituents exert their inhibition effects and these can be rather explained by a direct specific interaction of the constituents with LOX enzyme.
Competing interests
The author(s) declare that they have no competing interests.
Authors' contributions
L.R., L.B. and M.O. carried out all of the in vitro experiments reported in this manuscript. L.B. and V.K. participated in design of the study. D.K. carried out the methods of extract and fractions isolation. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.