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Unveiling the mechanism of Hesperidin-induced LdTopI-mediated cell death pathway in protozoan parasite Leishmania donovani.
Biochimie 2024 August 9
Unicellular protozoan parasite Leishmania donovani is the causative agent for visceral leishmaniasis (VL) or Kala-azar, a neglected fatal parasitic disease. The conventional treatment of VL consists of therapeutic agents having several shortcomings such as toxicity, high cost, efficacy variance and increased drug resistance. Therefore, there is a desperate need to develop an effective treatment against the parasite. Previous reports suggested that flavonoids can inhibit the enzyme Leishmania donovani DNA topoisomerase I (LdTopILS). Therefore, for the first time in this present study, we divulge HSP (one of the natural sources of flavonoids), as a potent natural antileishmanial compound with efficacy in BALB/c mice at 20 mg/kg of body weight, inhibits LdTopILS at 97% of its activity at 160 μM in preincubation condition (competitively). It binds with free enzyme and does not allow it to bind with the substrate DNA. Moreover, HSP does not stabilize DNA-topoisomerase I cleavable complex. Thus, HSP acts a catalytic topoisomerase I inhibitor, which inhibits complete activity by binding with Lys269 and Thr411 of large subunit of the enzyme. On the other hand, HSP induces the topo I-mediated programmed cell death process by the formation of cellular reactive oxygen species, resulting in depolarization of mitochondrial membrane potential, followed by fragmentation of nuclear DNA. Therefore, the present study illuminates a natural flavonoid that in future might be a promising lead for the treatment of VL.
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