Aryltetralin lignans from Hyptis brachiata inhibiting T lymphocyte proliferation

 

Authors
Keller, Morris; Winker, Moritz; Zimmermann-Klemd, Amy Marisa; Sperisen, Nino; Gupta, Mahabir P.; Solis, Pablo N.; Hamburger, Matthias; Potterat, Olivier; Gründemann, Carsten
Format
Article
Status
publishedVersion
Description

Increased activation and proliferation of T lymphocytes plays an essential role in the development of chronic inflammation and autoimmune diseases. Currently used immunosuppressive drugs often do not provide longlasting relief of symptoms and show a gradual loss of efficacy over time, and are accompanied by various side effects. Therefore, novel immunosuppressive lead substances are needed. For this purpose, an in-house library consisting of 600 extracts of plants from Panama was screened for inhibition of human T lymphocyte proliferation. As one of the hits, an ethyl acetate extract from the aerial parts of Hyptis brachiata (Lamiaceae) exhibited strong inhibitory effects. Subsequent investigation resulted in the isolation of seven aryltetralin lignans, five arylnaphthalene lignans, two flavonoids, three triterpenes, and cinnamyl cinnamate. Aryltetralin lignans inhibited T lymphocyte proliferation in a concentration-dependent manner without induction of apoptosis. No relevant inhibition was observed for the arylnaphthalene lignans, flavonoids, and triterpenes. Additional cell cycle arrest investigations revealed that isolated aryltetralin lignans potently inhibited cell division in G2/M phase similarly to podophyllotoxin. Multifluorescence panel analyses of the extract also showed weak suppressive effects on the production of IL-2 and TNF-α. Therefore, preparations made out of H. brachiata could be further explored as an interesting herbal alternative in the treatment of autoimmune diseases.

Publication Year
2023
Language
Topic
R Medicine (General)
RC0254 Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology (including Cancer)
RM Therapeutics. Pharmacology
Repository
RI Digital de la Universidad de Panamá
Get full text
http://up-rid.up.ac.pa/6909/1/morris_keller.pdf
Rights
openAccess
License
cc_by_nc_sa_4