Phytochemical profiling, pharmacology prediction, and molecular docking study of Chromolaena odorata extract against multiple target proteins in wound healing

Introduction: Wounds have a significant influence on socioeconomic and the quality of life. Many attempts have been taken to produce advanced wound dressing to fulfill demands. The incorporation of natural therapeutics like medicinal plants in wound dressings is currently popular. However, several m...

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Published in:Journal of HerbMed Pharmacology
Main Author: Mokhtar N.A.; Tap F.M.; Rozani N.H.A.; Khairudin N.B.A.; Ali R.R.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Shahrekord University of Medical Sciences 2023
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85173680798&doi=10.34172%2fjhp.2023.46047&partnerID=40&md5=554c8d0dca5c467bf114862ad6b8cbc2
id 2-s2.0-85173680798
spelling 2-s2.0-85173680798
Mokhtar N.A.; Tap F.M.; Rozani N.H.A.; Khairudin N.B.A.; Ali R.R.
Phytochemical profiling, pharmacology prediction, and molecular docking study of Chromolaena odorata extract against multiple target proteins in wound healing
2023
Journal of HerbMed Pharmacology
12
4
10.34172/jhp.2023.46047
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85173680798&doi=10.34172%2fjhp.2023.46047&partnerID=40&md5=554c8d0dca5c467bf114862ad6b8cbc2
Introduction: Wounds have a significant influence on socioeconomic and the quality of life. Many attempts have been taken to produce advanced wound dressing to fulfill demands. The incorporation of natural therapeutics like medicinal plants in wound dressings is currently popular. However, several medications have failed to enter the market due to inadequate pharmacokinetics data. Computer-aided tools are now available as advanced drug discovery methods, which can be used to screen pharmaceuticals from phytochemicals found in various medicinal plants. This study aims to evaluate the phytoconstituents of Chromolaena odorata extract and its pharmacological potential as a wound-healing agent. Methods: Phytoconstituents from C. odorata were identified using qualitative screening methods and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS), and their mechanistic properties were assessed using molecular docking and SwissADME tools. Results: Current works revealed that the topmost phytoconstituents in C. odorata were phytol (49.83%), hexadecanoic acid ethyl ester (9.40%), linolenic acid (8.07%), and squalene (3.53%). Through SwissADME analysis, all four topmost compounds obeyed Lipinski’s Rule of 5. In silico molecular docking study of these top phytoconstituents against several protein targets involved in wound healing revealed that squalene had the highest binding affinity to GSK3-β (-6.8 kJ/ mol), MMP-9 (-7.4 kJ/mol), and COX-2 (-8.6 kJ/mol) as compared to other ligands (phytol, linolenic acid, and hexadecenoic acid ethyl ester). Conclusion: These findings suggest that the most prominent compound that contributes to C. odorata’s wound healing capacity is squalene and the incorporation of C. odorata in potential wound dressing formulation is justified. © 2023 Nickan Research Institute. All rights reserved.
Shahrekord University of Medical Sciences
23455004
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Mokhtar N.A.; Tap F.M.; Rozani N.H.A.; Khairudin N.B.A.; Ali R.R.
spellingShingle Mokhtar N.A.; Tap F.M.; Rozani N.H.A.; Khairudin N.B.A.; Ali R.R.
Phytochemical profiling, pharmacology prediction, and molecular docking study of Chromolaena odorata extract against multiple target proteins in wound healing
author_facet Mokhtar N.A.; Tap F.M.; Rozani N.H.A.; Khairudin N.B.A.; Ali R.R.
author_sort Mokhtar N.A.; Tap F.M.; Rozani N.H.A.; Khairudin N.B.A.; Ali R.R.
title Phytochemical profiling, pharmacology prediction, and molecular docking study of Chromolaena odorata extract against multiple target proteins in wound healing
title_short Phytochemical profiling, pharmacology prediction, and molecular docking study of Chromolaena odorata extract against multiple target proteins in wound healing
title_full Phytochemical profiling, pharmacology prediction, and molecular docking study of Chromolaena odorata extract against multiple target proteins in wound healing
title_fullStr Phytochemical profiling, pharmacology prediction, and molecular docking study of Chromolaena odorata extract against multiple target proteins in wound healing
title_full_unstemmed Phytochemical profiling, pharmacology prediction, and molecular docking study of Chromolaena odorata extract against multiple target proteins in wound healing
title_sort Phytochemical profiling, pharmacology prediction, and molecular docking study of Chromolaena odorata extract against multiple target proteins in wound healing
publishDate 2023
container_title Journal of HerbMed Pharmacology
container_volume 12
container_issue 4
doi_str_mv 10.34172/jhp.2023.46047
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85173680798&doi=10.34172%2fjhp.2023.46047&partnerID=40&md5=554c8d0dca5c467bf114862ad6b8cbc2
description Introduction: Wounds have a significant influence on socioeconomic and the quality of life. Many attempts have been taken to produce advanced wound dressing to fulfill demands. The incorporation of natural therapeutics like medicinal plants in wound dressings is currently popular. However, several medications have failed to enter the market due to inadequate pharmacokinetics data. Computer-aided tools are now available as advanced drug discovery methods, which can be used to screen pharmaceuticals from phytochemicals found in various medicinal plants. This study aims to evaluate the phytoconstituents of Chromolaena odorata extract and its pharmacological potential as a wound-healing agent. Methods: Phytoconstituents from C. odorata were identified using qualitative screening methods and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS), and their mechanistic properties were assessed using molecular docking and SwissADME tools. Results: Current works revealed that the topmost phytoconstituents in C. odorata were phytol (49.83%), hexadecanoic acid ethyl ester (9.40%), linolenic acid (8.07%), and squalene (3.53%). Through SwissADME analysis, all four topmost compounds obeyed Lipinski’s Rule of 5. In silico molecular docking study of these top phytoconstituents against several protein targets involved in wound healing revealed that squalene had the highest binding affinity to GSK3-β (-6.8 kJ/ mol), MMP-9 (-7.4 kJ/mol), and COX-2 (-8.6 kJ/mol) as compared to other ligands (phytol, linolenic acid, and hexadecenoic acid ethyl ester). Conclusion: These findings suggest that the most prominent compound that contributes to C. odorata’s wound healing capacity is squalene and the incorporation of C. odorata in potential wound dressing formulation is justified. © 2023 Nickan Research Institute. All rights reserved.
publisher Shahrekord University of Medical Sciences
issn 23455004
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
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