4.2 Article

Capparis spinosa inhibits Leishmania major growth through nitric oxide production in vitro and arginase inhibition in silico

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL PARASITOLOGY
Volume 245, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.exppara.2022.108452

Keywords

Capparis spinosa; Leishmania major; Leishmanicidal effect; Nitric oxide; Arginase

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This study evaluated the effect of C. spinosa extracts on the growth and metabolic pathways of Leishmania major. The extracts exhibited significant inhibitory effects on the growth of L. major and induced nitric oxide production. In addition, in silico docking studies revealed inhibitory activity of C. spinosa compounds against the arginase enzyme. These findings suggest that C. spinosa may be a valuable source of new bio-molecules for leishmaniasis treatment.
Cutaneous leishmaniasis is an infectious disease, considered as a major public health problem in different regions of the world. The current treatments are limited due to their toxicity and treatment failures, which have increased the search for new substances of natural origin to control this infection. Capparis spinosa is an important medicinal plant, rich in biochemical compounds with a broad range of activities including antimi-crobial effects. Nevertheless, more investigations are still needed to determine its effect on Leishmania parasites. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of C. spinosa' extracts on Leishmania major promastigotes and amastigotes growth as well as on L-arginine metabolic pathways, especially the production of leishmanicidal molecules such as nitric oxide. Our results showed that C. spinosa' methanolic and aqueous extracts contained polyphenols and flavonoids at different concentrations. The methanolic extract of C. spinosa, compared to the aqueous extract, showed significantly higher amounts of total polyphenols (21.23 +/- 1.08) mg GAE/g of dw (P < 0.05), as well as a higher antioxidant activity evaluated respectively by Reducing Power and DPPH (EC50: 0.31 +/- 0.02 and 7.69 +/- 1.28) mg/ml. Both extracts significantly inhibited L. major promastigotes and intra-macrophagic amastigotes growth in vitro in a dose-dependent manner (P < 0.001) and induced NO production not only in Leishmania- infected macrophages but also in uninfected macrophages, without showing any cytotoxicity in vitro. Further-more, in silico docking studies showed that C. spinosa compounds identified by RP-HPLC exhibited inhibitory activity against the arginase enzyme. The leishmanicidal effect of C. spinosa may be due to its phenolic content and its mechanism of action may be mediated by an increase in NO production and by the inhibition of arginase enzyme in silico. These findings support the hypothesis that C. spinosa might be a valuable source of new bio-molecules for leishmaniasis treatment.

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