4.6 Article

Identification of Anti-Proliferative Compounds from Genista monspessulana Seeds through Covariate-Based Integration of Chemical Fingerprints and Bioactivity Datasets

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 27, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules27133996

Keywords

Fabaceae; Genista monspessulana; metabolic profiling; alkaloids; isoflavones

Funding

  1. Universidad Militar Nueva Granada [IMP-CIAS-2293]
  2. Universidad de La Sabana [ING-204-2018]

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Genista monspessulana is an invasive shrub that has reproductive vigor in many areas. In this study, ethanolic seed extracts from ten accessions of G. monspessulana were evaluated for their anti-proliferative activity against four cell lines. The extracts were also analyzed to determine their chemical composition. Seven bioactive compounds were identified and found to exhibit dose-dependent antiproliferative activity against the cell lines. These compounds were used to obtain a quinolizidine-pyranoisoflavone adduct, which showed comparable activity to curcumin. The study demonstrates the advantages of the composition-activity associative approach in identifying bioactive compounds efficiently.
Genista monspessulana (L.) L.A.S. Johnson (Fabaceae) is a Mediterranean plant introduced to South America and other regions for ornamental purposes. However, it is considered an invasive shrub due to its reproductive vigor in many areas. Unlike other Genista plants, G. monspessulana has few studies disclosing its biologically active components, particularly cytotoxic agents against cancer cells. Thus, as part of our research on anti-proliferative bioactives, a set of ethanolic seed extracts from ten accessions of G. monspessulana, collected in the Bogota plateau, were evaluated against four cell lines: PC-3 (prostate adenocarcinoma), SiHa (cervical carcinoma), A549 (lung carcinoma), and L929 (normal mouse fibroblasts). Extracts were also analyzed through liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry (LC/MS) to record chemical fingerprints and determine the composition and metabolite variability between accessions. Using multiple covariate statistics, chemical and bioactivity datasets were integrated to recognize patterns and identify bioactive compounds among studied extracts. G. monspessulana seed-derived extracts exhibited dose-dependent antiproliferative activity on PC-3 and SiHa cell lines (>500 mu g/mL < IC50 < 26.3 mu g/mL). Seven compounds (1-7) were inferred as the compounds most likely responsible for the observed anti-proliferative activity and subsequently isolated and identified by spectroscopic techniques. A tricyclic quinolizidine (1) and a pyranoisoflavone (2) were found to be the most active compounds, exhibiting selectivity against PC-3 cell lines (IC50 < 18.6 mu M). These compounds were used as precursors to obtain a quinolizidine-pyranoisoflavone adduct via Betti reaction, improving the activity against PC-3 and comparable to curcumin as the positive control. Results indicated that this composition-activity associative approach is advantageous to finding those bioactive principles efficiently within active extracts. This correlative association can be employed in further studies focused on the targeted isolation of anti-proliferative compounds from Genista plants and accessions.

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