Discovery and Characterization of Moracin C as an
Anti-Gouty Arthritis/Hyperuricemia Candidate by Docking-Based Virtual
Screening and Pharmacological Evaluation
posted on 2023-08-25, 22:13authored byMinyi Lv, Shaoyan Jiang, Shaojie Deng, Zean Zhao, Zichao Yang, Lu Liu, Tao Ke
In
the present study, a natural product database of compounds associated
with herbs traditionally verified to treat gout/hyperuricemia/arthritis
was constructed. 3D-shape and docking-based virtual screening was
conducted. To identify potential xanthine oxidase (XOD) inhibitors
in the database, eight compounds with commercial availability were
identified as high 3D-shape similarity with febuxostat (1), a known XOD inhibitor. Docking was used to further predict the
possible interactions between XOD and these compounds. Moracin C (2), moracin D (3), and isoformononetin (8) exhibited higher docking scores and binding energies than
other compounds. In vitro, 2 inhibited XOD with an IC50 value of 0.25 ± 0.14 μM, which is similar to
that of 1 (0.16 ± 0.08 μM). In a hyperuricemic
mouse model, 5–20 mg/kg 2 exhibited satisfying
urate-lowering and XOD inhibitory effects. Compound 2 also exhibited antiarthritis activities. In RAW264.7 cells, 2 at 1–10 μM inhibited the expression of IL-1β
and TNF-α induced by MSU. In an acute gouty arthritis model
in SD rats, 5–20 mg/kg 2 significantly alleviated
the toe swelling, inflammatory response, and dysfunction disorder
caused by monosodium urate (MSU). Compound 2 inhibited
serum IL-1β and TNF-α cytokines as well as reduced the
expression of the NLRP3/ASC/caspase-1 inflammasome in joints. In summary, 2 was an effective compound for the treatment of hyperuricemia/gouty
arthritis.