Abstract

Choisya ternata Kunth (Rutaceae) is native to North America where it is popularly known as “Mexican orange”. In this study, the anti-inflammatory effects of the essential oil (EO) obtained from the leaves of C. ternata, one of its minor components (ternanthranin—ISOAN) and its two synthetic analogues (methyl and propyl N-methylanthranilate – MAN and PAN) were evaluated. Mice pretreated with the EO (EO) obtained from C. ternata leaves (3–100 mg/kg, p.o.), ISOAN, MAN or PAN (1–30 mg/kg, p.o.) and the reference drugs, morphine (1 mg/kg, p.o.) and acetylsalicylic acid (ASA, 100 mg/kg, p.o.), were evaluated in inflammation models such as formalin and subcutaneous air pouch models, with measurement of cell migration, exudate volume, protein extravasation, nitric oxide and pro-inflammatory cytokines. The EO from C. ternata significantly inhibited the time that the animals spent licking the formalin-injected paw in the second phase of the model at their higher doses (30 and 100 mg/kg, respectively). An inhibition of the inflammatory reaction induced after subcutaneous carrageenan injection into air pouch was also observed. In this model, the EO significantly reduced cell migration, exudate volume, protein extravased, and the increase in levels of inflammatory mediators (nitric oxide, TNF-α and IL-1β). ISOAN, MAN and PAN behaved in the same fashion at much smaller doses. Also, these molecules were able to show significant effects in the reduction of paw edema (at all tested doses) when the phlogistic agent was carrageenan, bradykinin, 5-HT, PGE2, C48/80 or 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-acetate (TPA). None of the tested doses had any effect in reducing histamine-induced edema. Our results indicate that the EO from C. ternata and anthranilate derivatives demonstrates an anti-inflammatory effect.

Highlights

  • Inflammation is the body’s response to tissue injury, infection or invasion by microorganisms and its purpose is to keep homeostasis at normal

  • In this work we aimed to investigate the anti-inflammatory effect of the essential oil (EO) from C. ternata leaves as well as ISOAN, MAN and propyl N-methylanthranilate (PAN) using in vivo and in vitro models of inflammation

  • In this work we showed that the oral administration of EO obtained from the leaves of C. ternata reduced some aspects of inflammatory processes

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Summary

Introduction

Inflammation is the body’s response to tissue injury, infection or invasion by microorganisms and its purpose is to keep homeostasis at normal. The molecular responses to inflammation are increasingly well understood. The inflammatory process is characterized by cellular and microvascular reactions that serve to remove damaged and generate new tissue. During the inflammatory process there is an activation of the innate immunity. There is an increased production of various mediators including pro-inflammatory cytokines and eicosanoids [1, 2]. An excessive response can be associated to diseases with a significant inflammatory component being the case of asthma, rheumatoid arthritis, gout, autoimmune diseases and heart ischemia [3, 4]

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