4.6 Article

Chemical Synthesis and Biological Activities of Amaryllidaceae Alkaloid Norbelladine Derivatives and Precursors

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 27, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules27175621

Keywords

Amaryllidaceae alkaloid; norbelladine; dengue virus; anti-cholinesterase; specialized metabolism; O-methylation; galanthamine; Alzheimer's disease; antiviral

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada-Discovery Grants Program [RGPIN-2021-03218]
  2. Canada Research Chair on Plant Specialized Metabolism Award [950-232164]
  3. Canadian government

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Amaryllidaceae alkaloids, particularly norbelladine and its derivatives, show therapeutic potential with antiviral and anticholinesterase properties. O-methylated norbelladine-type alkaloids possess inhibitory effects on DENV infection and butyrylcholinesterase.
Amaryllidaceae alkaloids (AAs) are a structurally diverse family of alkaloids recognized for their many therapeutic properties, such as antiviral, anti-cholinesterase, and anticancer properties. Norbelladine and its derivatives, whose biological properties are poorly studied, are key intermediates required for the biosynthesis of all similar to 650 reported AAs. To gain insight into their therapeutic potential, we synthesized a series of O-methylated norbelladine-type alkaloids and evaluated their cytotoxic effects on two types of cancer cell lines, their antiviral effects against the dengue virus (DENV) and the human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1), and their anti-Alzheimer's disease (anticholinesterase and -prolyl oligopeptidase) properties. In monocytic leukemia cells, norcraugsodine was highly cytotoxic (CC50 = 27.0 mu M), while norbelladine was the most cytotoxic to hepatocarcinoma cells (CC50 = 72.6 mu M). HIV-1 infection was impaired only at cytotoxic concentrations of the compounds. The 3,4-dihydroxybenzaldehyde (selectivity index (SI) = 7.2), 3',4'-O-dimethylnorbelladine (SI = 4.8), 4'-O-methylnorbelladine (SI > 4.9), 3'-O-methylnorbelladine (SI > 4.5), and norcraugsodine (SI = 3.2) reduced the number of DENV-infected cells with EC50 values ranging from 24.1 to 44.9 mu M. The O-methylation of norcraugsodine abolished its anti-DENV potential. Norbelladine and its O-methylated forms also displayed butyrylcholinesterase-inhibition properties (IC50 values ranging from 26.1 to 91.6 mu M). Altogether, the results provided hints of the structure-activity relationship of norbelladine-type alkaloids, which is important knowledge for the development of new inhibitors of DENV and butyrylcholinesterase.

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