Abstract

Naringin (NAR), a flavanone glycoside, occurs widely in citrus fruits, vegetables, and alcoholic beverages. Despite evidence of the neuroprotective effects of NAR on animal models of ischemic stroke, brain cell-type-specific data about the antioxidant efficacy of NAR and possible protein targets of such beneficial effects are limited. Here, we demonstrate the brain cell type-specific prophylactic role of NAR, an FDA-listed food additive, in an in vitro oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD) model of cerebral ischemia using MTT and DCFDA assays. Using Bayes' theorem-based predictive model, we first ranked the top-10 protein targets (ALDH2, ACAT1, CTSB, FASN, LDHA, PTGS1, CTSD, LGALS1, TARDBP, and CDK1) from a curated list of 289 NAR-interacting proteins in neurons that might be mediating its antioxidant effect in the OGD model. When preincubated with NAR for 2days, N2a and CTX-TNA2 cells could withstand up to 8h of OGD without a noticeable decrease in cell viability. This cerebroprotective effect is partly mediated by reducing intracellular ROS production in the above two brain cell types. The antioxidant effect of NAR was comparable with the equimolar (50µM) concentration of clinically used ROS-scavenger and neuroprotective edaravone. Molecular docking of NAR with the top-10 protein targets from Bayes' analysis showed the lowest binding energy for CDK1 (- 8.8kcal/M). Molecular dynamics simulation analysis showed that NAR acts by inhibiting CDK1 by stably occupying its ATP-binding cavity. Considering diet has been listed as a risk factor for stroke, NAR may be explored as a component of functional food for stroke or related neurological disorders.

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