Abstract

Oxygenated heterocycles are emerging as valuable pharmacophores involved in the prophylaxis and treatment of several diseases elicited by the reactive oxygen species. Bioassay-led chromatographic fractionation of the organic extract of the gastropod mollusk Babylonia spirata (family Babylonidae) yielded two unprecedented 2H-chromenyl derivatives characterized as 2-(butyryloxy)-5-hydroxy-hexahydro-2H-chromene-3-methyl carboxylate (1) and (3-hydroxy-hexahydro-2H-chromen-2-yl)methyl pentanoate (2). The chromenyl derivative (1) registered significantly greater attenuation potential against pro-inflammatory 5-lipoxygenase (IC50 ~2.02mM) than those exhibited by the compound (2) (IC50 2.76mM) and the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug ibuprofen (IC50 4.36mM, p<.05). The compound (1) exhibited comparable antioxidant activity (IC50 1.47-1.72mM) with standard antioxidative agent α-tocopherol (IC50 1.4-1.7mM). Inhibitory potential of chromenyl derivative (1) toward α-glucosidase (IC50 1.18mM) and α-amylase (IC50 0.92mM) was greater than those displayed by 2 (IC50 1.16-1.56mM). Structure-activity relationships revealed that bioactivities of the compounds were determined by the electronic factors and hydrophilic-lipophilic balance. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS: The marine gastropod Babylonia spirata is one of the prominent edible gastropod species harvested from the coastlines along the southwestern region of the Indian peninsula. Two 2H-chromenyl derivatives were isolated to homogeneity from the organic extract of the marine buccinid gastropod B. spirata by the bioactivity-guided chromatographic fractionation and were found to possess potential antioxidant and attenuation properties against pro-inflammatory 5-lipoxygenase and carbolytic enzymes. The attenuation properties of the 2H-chromenyls against pro-inflammatory 5-lipoxygenase showed that 2H-chromenyl analogs possessed significantly greater anti-inflammatory potential than the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug ibuprofen. In particular, the chromenyl derivative bearing 2H-chromene-3-methyl carboxylate framework might constitute a prospective biogenic constituent in functional food and pharmaceutical applications for use against oxidative agents, including inflammation and hyperglycemic pathologies.

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