Abstract

BackgroundNeuroinflammation is a vital factor participating in the whole pathogenetic process of diverse neurodegenerative disorders, but accessible clinical drugs are still insufficient due to their inefficacy and side effects. Triterpenoids are reported to possess potential anti-neuroinflammatory activities, and the leaves of Ilex chinensis are a commonly used herbal medicine containing many ursane-type and oleanane-type triterpenoids. However, the novel triterpenoids from I. chinensis and their underlying mechanisms are still elusive. PurposeTo isolate novel seco-ursane triterpenoids with anti-neuroinflammatory effects from the leaves of I. chinensis and reveal their underlying mechanisms. Study design and methodsThe novel compound was purified by column chromatography and identified by comprehensive spectroscopic experiments. The LPS-induced BV-2 cell model and LPS-induced acute murine brain inflammation model were used to assess the anti-neuroinflammatory effect of the structure and further understand its underlying mechanisms by cell viability, ELISA, Western blot analysis, qRT‒PCR analysis, behavior analysis, H&E staining, and immunofluorescence staining experiments. ResultsIlexchinene is a novel ursane-type triterpenoid with a rare 18,19-seco-ring skeleton that was first isolated and identified from I. chinensis. Ilexchinene evidently reduced the overexpression of inflammatory substances in vitro. A mechanistic study suggested that ilexchinene could decrease NF-κB activation to prevent the formation of the NLRP3 inflammasome in the early neuroinflammatory response; in addition, it could prevent the phosphorylation of ERK and JNK. In vivo, ilexchinene remarkably improved LPS-induced mouse behavioral deficits and diminished the number of overactivated microglial cells. Furthermore, ilexchinene evidently diminished the overexpression of inflammatory substances in mouse brains. A mechanistic study confirmed that ilexchinene markedly suppressed the MAPK/NF-κB pathway to relieve the neuroinflammatory response. ConclusionWe identified a novel 18,19-seco-ursane triterpenoid from the leaves of I. chinensis and revealed its underlying mechanism of neuroinflammation for the first time. These findings suggest that ilexchinene might possess promising therapeutic effects in neuroinflammation.

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