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The aim of this research work was to explore the antidiabetic potential of polyphenols
from faba beans by in vitro and in silico approach. Diabetes mellitus is a group of
metabolic disorder of glucose metabolism. Excessive production of reactive oxygen
species (ROS) is the result of oxidative stress and responsibility for the development of insulin resistance, β‐cell dysfunction, impaired glucose tolerance, and type 2 diabetes. Free radical production is balanced by the anti-oxidative defense system. However,
polyphenols (gallic-acid, ellagic-acid, catechin, epicatechin) have an inclination to
neutralize excessive free radical generation due to antioxidant property. India is rich in
valuable natural resources of fruits, vegetables, cereals, herbs, and medicinal plants many
of which remain unexploited and are limited for regional or rural use only. Vicia faba
beans are nutritionally rich and staple pulses of the less privileged society of India.
Recently, there has been a growing interest in natural polyphenols. Since the synthetic drugs available in the market have several side effects. Therefore, it would be important
to explore natural dietary polyphenols of similar structure with inhibitory activity against
α-amylase, α-glucosidase, xanthine oxidase in the treatment of diabetes mellitus. The
present study on polyphenols derived from faba bean may be an alternatives strategies in overcoming hyperglycemia-induced chronic diseases, such as type 2 diabetes.
Phytochemical screening, chemo-profiling, FTIR and HPLC analysis confirmed the
presence of phenolics compounds in Vicia faba beans. Acetone seed extract showed
phenolics(polyphenols) compound like gallic acid (m/z [M−H]=169.0124,C7H6O5) and
flavonoids compounds ellagic acid, epigallocatechin (m/z[M−H=305.0644,C15H14O7), catechin (m/z[M−H]=289.0656,C15H14O6), catechin derivatives epigallocatechin gallate
(m/z [M−H]=457.0578,C22H18O11) and epicatechin monogallate (m/z [M−H] =441.081
,C22H18O10). The protonated and fragmented behavior of acetone seed extract revealed the presence of gallic-acid (MS/MS ,m/z 169 ) and catechin (MSn, m/z 288.3).
In vitro studies of the effect of phenolic extracts were made on key enzymes linked to
type 2 diabetes mellitus (α-amylase and alpha-glucosidase). Different polar extract of
faba seeds was evaluated and acetone extract was found to have the highest inhibitory
potential against porcine α-amylase (IC50 value of 2.94 mg/mL). Kinetic analysis revealed
that the acetone extract displayed a mixed mode of inhibition towards α-amylase. In-silico
analysis was agreement with in-vitro studies in which phenolic compounds (catechin,
epicatechin, gallic acid, and ellagic acid) showed more negative free energy against
standard drug (acarbose) and bound with catalytic and nonresidues of α-amylase. Ethanol
extract also showed the mixed mode of inhibition (Km, apparent = 0.59 ±0.09 mM and
Vmax, apparent 0.152 ±0.022 mM/minute) on alpha-glucosidase. These results might be
due to the synergistic action of constituents present in seed extract or acting separately.
Molecular docking studies of gallic acid and catechin on α-glucosidase, alpha-amylase
proposed productive binding modes with an effective number of hydrogen bonds and
binding energy. Tyr 63, Arg197, Asp198, Glu 233, Asn324, Asp 326 of α-glucosidase
participated in binding events with gallic acid and catechin. Gallic acid and catechin were
demonstrated significant binding energy (-6.58 kcal/mol and -7.25 kcal/mol). Molecular
dynamics simulation studies were performed for both complexes i.e. gal:α-glucosidase,
cat: α-glucosidase and cat: α-amylase along with apo state of α-glucosidase, which
revealed stable systems during simulation. Catechin displayed better binding robustness
in comparison to gallic acid with α-glucosidase and α-amylase during simulation.
Moreover, molecular docking and molecular dynamics simulation studies supply the predicted residues that may hold favorable polyphenolic-specific interactions.
Computational biology approaches might be influencing the effects of dietary
polyphenols from faba bean on the modulation of metabolic diseases by testing the in
vitro study.
Acetone extract of faba bean (Vicia faba L.) was found to be highest total phenol
and flavonoid content among all extracts. Antioxidant activity for inhibition percentage
(free radical scavenging activity) had 86.47 % for acetone extract, and 97.36% for
ascorbic acid respectively. IC50 value of ascorbic acid and acetone extract was found to be
9.0 μg/mL±0.20 and 30.0 μg/mL±0.21 respectively. Faba bean seeds contains catechin,
epicatechin, gallic acid, and ellagic acid which on molecular docking study revealed that
it binds effectively with xanthine oxidase by binding energy of -7.78 kcal/mol, -6.11
kcal/mol,-6.39 kcal/mol,-5.78 kcal/mol respectively compared to standard allopurinol
drug with binding energy of -4.94 kcal/mol. It was found that gallic acid, ellagic acid,
catechin, epicatechin (polyphenols) and allopurinol bind other than catalytic residues
(Glu-1261) of xanthine oxidase. The probable binding modes of the gallic-acid and
catechin from the present study may extend the knowledge of the XO-polyphenols
interactions and offer a way to design the analogs of gallic acid and catechin with
minimizing oxidative stress. In vitro and in silico analysis showed that mode of enzyme
inhibition was the mixed type.
2-Deoxy-2-[(7-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazol-4-yl)amino]-D-glucose (2-NBDG) can
be transported into S. cerevisiae through glucose transporters and that glucose uptake
activity in yeast can be directly evaluated by measuring the incorporation of 2-NBDG
into the cell as fluorescence intensity. Acetone extract showed a significant effect on
glucose uptake rate in yeast cells by 77.28±2.42% and least was found in chloroform
seed extract by 52.36± 2.06% %. Flow cytometry and confocal microscopy techniques revealed that acetone seed extract was reducing oxidative stress with respect to control in
yeast cells. AFM microscopy revealed that at 3% hydrogen peroxide concentration
roughness was found to be maximum (441±6.7 nm), when 3% H202 was used in
combination with acetone seed extract on yeast cells, surface roughness diminished to
251±6.2 nm. Propidium iodide and DAPI staining showed apoptotic ratio significantly
high as 0.40 (40 ± 1.18%, P<0.05) and 0.42 (42 ± 1.16%, P<0.05) respectively in
hydrogen peroxide-treated cell as compared to other untreated cells. MTT assay showed
that acetone extract had maximum survival rate (82.067%, P<0.05) and least survival rate
was found to be in the case of chloroform extract (70.48%, P<0.05).
Flow cytometry study revealed the consequence of H2O2 on cell line as increased cell
death was observed from 9.72% to 41.66% as compared to the control. AFM, SEM and
ROS measurement also confirmed the protective effect of polyphenols in 3T3-L1 cell
lines. Propidium iodide and DAPI staining showed that apoptotic ratio as 0.35 ± 2.62%
(P<0.05) and 30 ± 2.54 in hydrogen peroxide-treated the cell as compared to control. The
observations of flow cytometry and confocal microscopy marked the effect of seed
extract (0.86±0.031, 3.52 ±0.52, P<0.05), on glucose uptake in cells through the better
relative fluorescence intensity than control. Synergistic effect of polyphenols might be
responsible for the reduction of oxidative stress and hypoglycaemic potential in the yeast
cell and 3T3-L1 cell line. Hypoglycemic and anti-oxidative potential of faba bean may be
due to the synergistic effect of polyphenols present in seed extract or acting
independently. Dietary faba bean polyphenols would act as a lead compound to drug
discovery and development process. The findings of the present study may give an insight
into the further development of the novel antidiabetic drug from the seeds of Vicia faba. |
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