Artículo de Revista
Date
2024
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Autor
Monroy Cárdenas, Matías Esteban
Almarza Chávez, Cristopher
Valenzuela Hormazábal, Paulina
Ramírez, David
Urra, Félix A.
Martínez Cifuentes, Maximiliano
Araya Maturana, Ramiro Juan
Almarza Chávez, Cristopher
Valenzuela Hormazábal, Paulina
Ramírez, David
Urra, Félix A.
Martínez Cifuentes, Maximiliano
Araya Maturana, Ramiro Juan
Profesor Guía
Profesor Tutor
Profesor
Profesor Informante
Autor Institucional
Jefe de Proyecto
Profesor Co-Tutor
Profesor Patrocinante
Profesor Tutor
Publisher
Mdpi
Compartir este registro
Identification of Antioxidant Methyl Derivatives of Ortho-Carbonyl Hydroquinones That Reduce Caco-2 Cell Energetic Metabolism and Alpha-Glucosidase Activity
Abstract
alpha-glucosidase, a pharmacological target for type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), is present in the intestinal brush border membrane and catalyzes the hydrolysis of sugar linkages during carbohydrate digestion. Since alpha-glucosidase inhibitors (AGIs) modulate intestinal metabolism, they may influence oxidative stress and glycolysis inhibition, potentially addressing intestinal dysfunction associated with T2DM. Herein, we report on a study of an ortho-carbonyl substituted hydroquinone series, whose members differ only in the number and position of methyl groups on a common scaffold, on radical-scavenging activities (ORAC assay) and correlate them with some parameters obtained by density functional theory (DFT) analysis. These compounds' effect on enzymatic activity, their molecular modeling on alpha-glucosidase, and their impact on the mitochondrial respiration and glycolysis of the intestinal Caco-2 cell line were evaluated. Three groups of compounds, according their effects on the Caco-2 cells metabolism, were characterized: group A (compounds 2, 3, 5, 8, 9, and 10) reduces the glycolysis, group B (compounds 1 and 6) reduces the basal mitochondrial oxygen consumption rate (OCR) and increases the extracellular acidification rate (ECAR), suggesting that it induces a metabolic remodeling toward glycolysis, and group C (compounds 4 and 7) increases the glycolysis lacking effect on OCR. Compounds 5 and 10 were more potent as alpha-glucosidase inhibitors (AGIs) than acarbose, a well-known AGI with clinical use. Moreover, compound 5 was an OCR/ECAR inhibitor, and compound 10 was a dual agent, increasing the proton leak-driven OCR and inhibiting the maximal electron transport flux. Additionally, menadione-induced ROS production was prevented by compound 5 in Caco-2 cells. These results reveal that slight structural variations in a hydroquinone scaffold led to diverse antioxidant capability, alpha-glucosidase inhibition, and the regulation of mitochondrial bioenergetics in Caco-2 cells, which may be useful in the design of new drugs for T2DM and metabolic syndrome.
Description
Keywords
Hydroquinones , Methyl derivatives , Antioxidants , Diabetes , DFT , Docking
Citation
DOI
10.3390/ijms25158334
Nivel de acceso
Acceso abierto
Enlace relacionado
Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible
Indexado
Artículo indexado en Web of Science
Artículo indexado en Scopus
Artículo indexado en Scopus