Abstract

The present study discovered four novel hyaluronan-degrading enzyme (hyaluronidase) inhibitors including chikusetsusaponins and catechins through the activity-guided separation of Panax japonicus and Prunus salicina, respectively. Although the discovery resulted in identification of usual frequent hitters, subsequent mechanistic characterizations under our DMSO-perturbed assay conditions and related protocols revealed that chikusetusaponin IV would serve as an aggregating and non-specific binding inhibitor, while (−)-epicatechin would interact specifically with enzyme at the catalytic site or more likely at a kind of catechin-binding site with a relatively week inhibitory activity. The latter description might provide a possible explanation for the well-known fact that a series of catechin have been described as frequent hitters in biological assays with a moderate activity. Thus, the present study demonstrated a practical and robust methodology to characterize initial screening hits mechanistically molecule-by-molecule in the early stage of natural product-based drug discovery.

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