Abstract

Alkaloids are a structurally complex group of natural products that have a diverse range of biological activities and significant therapeutic applications. In this study, we examined the acute, anxiolytic-like effects of nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR)-activating alkaloids with reported neuropharmacological effects but whose effects on anxiety are less well understood. Because α4β2 nAChRs can regulate anxiety, we first demonstrated the functional activities of alkaloids on these receptors in vitro. Their effects on anxiety-like behavior in zebrafish were then examined using the zebrafish novel tank test (NTT). The NTT is a relatively high-throughput behavioral paradigm that takes advantage of the natural tendency of fish to dive down when stressed or anxious. We report for the first time that cotinine, anatabine, and methylanatabine may suppress this anxiety-driven zebrafish behavior after a single 20-min treatment. Effective concentrations of these alkaloids were well above the concentrations naturally found in plants and the concentrations needed to induce anxiolytic-like effect by nicotine. These alkaloids showed good receptor interactions at the α4β2 nAChR agonist site as demonstrated by in vitro binding and in silico docking model, although somewhat weaker than that for nicotine. Minimal or no significant effect of other compounds may have been due to low bioavailability of these compounds in the brain, which is supported by the in silico prediction of blood–brain barrier permeability. Taken together, our findings indicate that nicotine, although not risk-free, is the most potent anxiolytic-like alkaloid tested in this study, and other natural alkaloids may regulate anxiety as well.

Highlights

  • Plants are a rich source of nutrients and chemical ingredients that help maintain physical and mental health [45]

  • Several food plants and products contain alkaloids, such as comfrey, honey, coffee, rye, wheat, and barley [69]. Those that activate nicotinic acetylcholine receptors are of great interest due to the critical role nAChRs play in regulating neuropharmacology of mood and anxiety [48, 63]

  • We report here that nicotine, cotinine, anatabine, and methylanatabine have the potential to reduce anxiety-like behavior in zebrafish, while other nAChR-targeting alkaloids, such as anabasine, nornicotine, and metanicotine, have no effect

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Summary

Introduction

Plants are a rich source of nutrients and chemical ingredients that help maintain physical and mental health [45]. The NTT takes advantage of the innate behavior of zebrafish to dive and dwell at the bottom of a body of water to avoid danger or stress This behavioral paradigm has been previously validated by many labs to test the anxiolytic-like effects of compounds, such as nicotine, fluoxetine, diazepam, buspirone, chlordiazepoxide, and tranylcypromine [5, 6, 10, 14, 18, 22, 25, 26, 29, 30, 32, 36, 37, 39, 44, 50, 53, 57,58,59, 66]. We report here that nicotine, cotinine, anatabine, and methylanatabine have the potential to reduce anxiety-like behavior in zebrafish, while other nAChR-targeting alkaloids, such as anabasine, nornicotine, and metanicotine, have no effect. These additional findings provided further explanations why the alkaloids examined in this study may have induced different levels of anxiolytic-like effects

Materials and methods
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