Centre for Marine Bioproducts Development (CMBD), Flinders University, GPO Box 2100, Adelaide 5001, South Australia, Australia; Medical Biotechnology, College of Medicine and Public Health, Flinders University, GPO Box 2100, Adelaide 5001, South Australia, Australia; Ministry of Higher education in Saudi Arabia, King Faisal Hospital Street, Riyadh 11153, Saudi Arabia.
Discipline of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Neurotoxicol Teratol. 2018 Jul-Aug;68:72-83. doi: 10.1016/j.ntt.2018.05.002. Epub 2018 May 18.
South Australia is a biodiversity hotspot of marine sponges and macroalgae. This study aimed to evaluate the potential neuroprotective activity of extracts from these two marine sources by reducing the toxicity of human amyloid beta Aβ in a cell model assay using PC-12 cells. A total of 92 extracts (43, 13, 16, and 20 extracts from sponge of 8 orders and 17 families, green algae of 3 orders and 4 families, brown algae of 6 orders and 8 families, and red algae of 5 orders and 10 families, respectively) were initially screened at three different concentrations (0.25, 2.5 and 25 μg/mL) to evaluate their toxicity using the MTT assay. About half of these extracts (26, 6, 5, and 10 extracts from sponge, green algae, brown algae, and red algae, respectively) showed some cytotoxicity, and were hence excluded from further assays. The rest of extracts (45 extracts in total) at 0.25 and 25 μg/mL were subsequently screened in a neuroprotection assay against Aβ cytotoxicity. A cell viability reduction of 30% was observed in the MTT assay when the cells were treated with 1 μM Aβ. 29 extracts (13, 4, 7, and 5 extracts from sponge, green algae, brown algae, and red algae, respectively) reduced the toxicity induced by Aβ (P < 0.05), indicating neuroprotective activity. These results demonstrate that marine sponge and macroalgae form a broad spectrum are promising sources of neuroprotective compounds against the hallmark neurotoxic protein in Alzheimer's disease (AD).
南澳大利亚是海洋海绵和大型藻类的生物多样性热点地区。本研究旨在通过在 PC-12 细胞模型测定中降低人淀粉样蛋白β Aβ 的毒性,评估这两种海洋来源物的潜在神经保护活性。共筛选了 92 种提取物(海绵 8 目 17 科 43 种,绿藻 3 目 4 科 13 种,褐藻 6 目 8 科 16 种,红藻 5 目 10 科 20 种),分别在 3 个不同浓度(0.25、2.5 和 25μg/ml)下用 MTT 法测定其毒性。约一半的提取物(海绵、绿藻、褐藻和红藻分别有 26、6、5 和 10 种提取物)表现出一定的细胞毒性,因此被排除在进一步的测定之外。其余的提取物(共 45 种提取物)在 0.25 和 25μg/ml 浓度下进一步在神经保护测定中进行了抗 Aβ 细胞毒性筛选。当用 1μM Aβ 处理细胞时,MTT 测定中观察到细胞活力降低了 30%。有 29 种提取物(海绵、绿藻、褐藻和红藻分别有 13、4、7 和 5 种提取物)降低了 Aβ 诱导的毒性(P<0.05),表明具有神经保护活性。这些结果表明,海洋海绵和大型藻类形成了一个广泛的有希望的神经保护化合物来源,可对抗阿尔茨海默病(AD)标志性神经毒性蛋白。