Number of hydroxyl groups on the B-ring of flavonoids affects their antioxidant activity and interaction with phorbol ester binding site of PKCδ C1B domain: in Vitro and in silico studies

dc.contributor.author Teeradate Kongpichitchoke
dc.contributor.author Hsu, Jue-Liang
dc.contributor.author Huang, Tzou-Chi
dc.date.accessioned 2016-03-18T02:52:08Z
dc.date.available 2016-03-18T02:52:08Z
dc.date.issued 2015
dc.description.abstract Although flavonoids have been reported for their benefits and nutraceutical potential use, the importance of their structure on their beneficial effects, especially on signal transduction mechanisms, has not been well clarified. In this study, three flavonoids, pinocembrin, naringenin, and eriodictyol, were chosen to determine the effect of hydroxyl groups on the B-ring of flavonoid structure on their antioxidant activity. In vitro assays, including DPPH scavenging activity, ROS quantification by flow cytometer, and proteins immunoblotting, and in silico analysis by molecular docking between the flavonoids and C1B domain of PKCδ phorbol ester binding site were both used to complete this study. Eriodictyol (10 μM), containing two hydroxyl groups on the B-ring, exhibited significantly higher (p < 0.05) antioxidant activity than pinocembrin and naringenin. The IC50 values of eriodictyol, naringenin, and pinocembrin were 17.4 ± 0.40, 30.2 ± 0.61, and 44.9 ± 0.57 μM, respectively. In addition, eriodictyol at 10 μM remarkably inhibited the phosphorylation of PKCδ at 63.4% compared with PMA-activated RAW264.7, whereas pinocembrin and naringenin performed inhibition activity at 76.8 and 72.6%, respectively. According to the molecular docking analysis, pinocembrin, naringenin, and eriodictyol showed -CDOCKER_energy values of 15.22, 16.95, and 21.49, respectively, reflecting that eriodictyol could bind with the binding site better than the other two flavonoids. Interestingly, eriodictyol had a remarkably different pose to bind with the kinase as a result of the two hydroxyl groups on its B-ring, which consequently contributed to greater antioxidant activity over pinocembrin and naringenin. en_US
dc.format.extent 6 pages en_US
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf en_US
dc.identifier.citation Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 2015, 63, 4580-4586 en_US
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.au.edu/handle/6623004553/17780
dc.language.iso eng en_US
dc.publisher American Chemical Society en_US
dc.subject Flavonoid en_US
dc.subject Atioxidant en_US
dc.subject PKCδ en_US
dc.subject Molecular docking en_US
dc.subject Phorbol ester en_US
dc.title Number of hydroxyl groups on the B-ring of flavonoids affects their antioxidant activity and interaction with phorbol ester binding site of PKCδ C1B domain: in Vitro and in silico studies en_US
dc.type Text en_US
mods.genre Article en_US
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