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Isocostic Acid, a Promising Bioactive Agent from the Essential Oil of Inula viscosa (L.): Insights from Drug Likeness Properties, Molecular Docking and SAR Analysis.

The chemical composition of the essential oil (LEO) and its volatile fractions (V1 -V10 ) collected during the hydrodistillation process every 15 min from the fresh leaves of I. viscosa (L.), growing in Tunisia, were analyzed by GC-FID and GC/MS. Eighty-two compounds, representing 90.9-99.4 % of the total samples, were identified. The crude essential oil (LEO) and its fractions (V1 -V10 ) were characterized by the presence of a high amount of oxygenated sesquiterpenes (82.7-95.8 %). Isocostic acid (1) was found to be the most abundant component (37.4-83.9 %) and was isolated from the same essential oil over silica gel column chromatography and identified by spectroscopic methods (1 H, 13 C, DEPT 135 NMR and EI-MS) and by comparison with literature data. Furthermore, the fresh leaves essential oil (LEO), its volatile fractions (V1 -V10 ) as well as compound 1 were screened for their antibacterial, antityrosinase, anticholinesterase and anti-5-lipoxygenase activities. It was found that the isolated compound 1 exhibited an interesting antibacterial activity against Staphylococcus aureus ATCC 25923 (MIC=32 μg/mL) and Enterococcus faecalis ATCC 29212 (MIC=32 μg/mL) and the highest antityrosinase activity (IC50 =13.82±0.87 μg/mL). Compound 1 was also found to be able to strongly inhibit 5-lipoxygenase with an IC50 value of 59.21±0.85 μg/mL. The bioactivity and drug likeness scores of compound 1 were calculated using Molinspiration software and interpreted, and the structure-activity relationship (SAR) was discussed with the help of molecular docking analysis.

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