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The anti‐inflammatory activity of flavonoids and alkaloids from Sophora flavescens alleviates psoriasiform lesions: Prenylation and methoxylation beneficially enhance bioactivity and skin targeting.

Authors :
Lin, Chwan‐Fwu
Lin, Ming‐Hsien
Hung, Chi‐Feng
Alshetaili, Abdullah
Tsai, Yung‐Fong
Jhong, Cai‐Ling
Fang, Jia‐You
Source :
Phytotherapy Research; Apr2024, Vol. 38 Issue 4, p1951-1970, 20p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The herb Sophora flavescens displays anti‐inflammatory activity and can provide a source of antipsoriatic medications. We aimed to evaluate whether S. flavescens extracts and compounds can relieve psoriasiform inflammation. The ability of flavonoids (maackiain, sophoraflavanone G, leachianone A) and alkaloids (matrine, oxymatrine) isolated from S. flavescens to inhibit production of cytokine/chemokines was examined in keratinocytes and macrophages. Physicochemical properties and skin absorption were determined by in silico molecular modeling and the in vitro permeation test (IVPT) to establish the structure‐permeation relationship (SPR). The ethyl acetate extract exhibited higher inhibition of interleukin (IL)‐6, IL‐8, and CXCL1 production in tumor necrosis factor‐α‐stimulated keratinocytes compared to the ethanol and water extracts. The flavonoids demonstrated higher cytokine/chemokine inhibition than alkaloids, with the prenylated flavanones (sophoraflavanone G, leachianone A) led to the highest suppression. Flavonoids exerted anti‐inflammatory effects via the extracellular signal‐regulated kinase, p38, activator protein‐1, and nuclear factor‐κB signaling pathways. In the IVPT, prenylation of the flavanone skeleton significantly promoted skin absorption from 0.01 to 0.22 nmol/mg (sophoraflavanone G vs. eriodictyol). Further methoxylation of a prenylated flavanone (leachianone A) elevated skin absorption to 2.65 nmol/mg. Topical leachianone A reduced the epidermal thickness in IMQ‐treated mice by 47%, and inhibited cutaneous scaling and cytokine/chemokine overexpression at comparable levels to a commercial betamethasone product. Thus, prenylation and methoxylation of S. flavescens flavanones may enable the design of novel antipsoriatic agents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0951418X
Volume :
38
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Phytotherapy Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176497155
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ptr.8140