Steroidal Saponins from Water Eggplant (Fruits of <i>Solanum torvum</i>) Exhibit Anti-Epileptic Activity against Pentylenetetrazole-Induced Seizure Model in Zebrafish

oleh: Rui Ren, Ming-yan Zhang, Tengyun Shu, Ya-ting Kong, Li-hua Su, Hai-zhou Li

Format: Article
Diterbitkan: MDPI AG 2024-03-01

Deskripsi

The fruits of <i>Solanum torvum</i> Swartz, a wild relative of eggplant, are consumed as a wild vegetable in tropical regions of Africa, Asia, and South America. In traditional Chinese medicine, it is believed to have anti-inflammatory and sedative effects. In the Philippines, water decoction is used to treat hyperactivity disorder. Twenty-two steroidal saponins were isolated and purified from the fruits grown in Yunnan, China, including six new compounds: torvosides U–Z (<b>1</b>–<b>6</b>). During drying and cooking, the saponins may undergo transformation, resulting in small amounts of sapogenins. These transformations can include dehydration of hydroxyl groups at position C22, formation of double bonds at position 20, 22 or 22, 23, and even formation of peroxide products. Saponin compounds torvoside X (<b>4</b>), torvoside Y (<b>5</b>), torvoside A (<b>7</b>), and (25<i>S</i>)-3-oxo-5<i>α</i>-spirostan-6<i>α</i>-yl-<i>O</i>-<i>β</i>-<span style="font-variant: small-caps;">d</span>-xylopyranoside (<b>20</b>), which are glycosylated at C-6, showed certain anti-epileptic activity in a pentylenetetrazole-induced zebrafish seizure model. No antiproliferative activity was detected when tested on the cancer cell line HepG2, and no hepatotoxic effect was noted on normal liver cell line LO2.