Abstract

Microglial activation can release free radicals and various pro-inflammatory cytokines, which implicates the progress of a neurodegenerative disease. Therefore suppression of microglial activation can be an appropriate strategy for combating neurodegenerative diseases. Betanin is a red food dye that acts as free radical scavenger and can be a promising candidate for this purpose. In this study, purification of betanin from red beetroots was carried out by normal phase colum chromatography, yielding 500 mg of betanin from 100 g of red beetroot. The purified betanin was evaluated by TLC, UV-visible, HPLC, ESI-MASS, FT-IR spectroscopy. Investigation on the inhibitory effect of betanin on activated microglia was performed using primary microglial culture. The results showed that betanin significantly inhibited lipopolysaccharide induced microglial function including the production of nitric oxide free radicals, reactive oxygen species, tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), interleukin-6 (IL-6) and interleukin-1 beta (IL-1β). Moreover, betanin modulated mitochondrial membrane potential, lysosomal membrane permeabilization and adenosine triphosphate. We further investigated the interaction of betanin with TNF-α, IL-6 and Nitric oxide synthase (iNOS or NOS2) using in silico molecular docking analysis. The docking results demonstrated that betanin have significant negative binding energy against active sites of TNF-α, IL-6 and iNOS.

Highlights

  • Increasing evidences demonstrate that microglial activation and inflammatory response pathway may play crucial role in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases [1] Microglia are the most important immune cells of the central nerves system (CNS)

  • Purification of betanin from the extract of red beetroot was performed by using normal phase column chromatography (NPC)

  • Comparison of seven different methods for purification of betanin showed that the use of NPC and ion exchange chromatography resulted in purification of 31.4 mg and 89.1mg of betanin from 100 g of fresh beetroot, respectively [32]

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Summary

Introduction

Increasing evidences demonstrate that microglial activation and inflammatory response pathway may play crucial role in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases [1] Microglia are the most important immune cells of the central nerves system (CNS). Managing microglial activation, neuroinflammation, and oxidative stress raised by reducing free radicals may demonstrate therapeutic benefits in neurodegenerative diseases. We report the results of investigation on the anti-inflammatory effect of betanin in stimulated microglial cells for possible effects on reducing neuroinflammation

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