Preliminary studies: the potential anti-angiogenic activities of two Sulawesi Island (Indonesia) propolis and their chemical characterization

Several studies have previously reported propolis, or its constituents, to inhibit tumour angiogenesis. The anti-angiogenic activity of two Indonesian stingless bee propolis extracts from Sulawesi Island on vascular cells were assessed. Sample D01 was obtained from the outer side of bee hives, while...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Muhammad Iqbal, Tai-ping Fan, David Watson, Samya Alenezi, Khaled Saleh, Muhamad Sahlan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-07-01
Series:Heliyon
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844019355987
id doaj-6ccb51a072d9481c8de3954a11c190c1
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6ccb51a072d9481c8de3954a11c190c12020-11-25T02:40:06ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402019-07-0157e01978Preliminary studies: the potential anti-angiogenic activities of two Sulawesi Island (Indonesia) propolis and their chemical characterizationMuhammad Iqbal0Tai-ping Fan1David Watson2Samya Alenezi3Khaled Saleh4Muhamad Sahlan5Department of Pharmacology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom; Corresponding author.Department of Pharmacology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United KingdomStrathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, United KingdomStrathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, United KingdomStrathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, United KingdomDepartment of Chemical Engineering, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia; Corresponding author.Several studies have previously reported propolis, or its constituents, to inhibit tumour angiogenesis. The anti-angiogenic activity of two Indonesian stingless bee propolis extracts from Sulawesi Island on vascular cells were assessed. Sample D01 was obtained from the outer side of bee hives, while D02 was from the inner side of the same hives. The extracts were profiled by using liquid chromatography coupled to high resolution mass spectrometry. The anti-angiogenic capacity was assessed on HUVECs and placenta-derived pericytes by cell viability, multi-channel wound healing, and CoCl2 based-hypoxia assays. The exact chemical composition has not been confirmed. The most abundant compounds in Indonesian sample D01 seem to be unusual since they do not immediately fall into a clear class. Two of the most abundant compounds have elemental compositions matching actinopyrones. Identification on the basis of elemental composition is not definitive but compounds in D01 are possibly due to unusually modified terpenoids. Sample D02 has abundant compounds which include four related diterpenes with differing degrees of oxygenation and some sesquiterpenes. However, again the profile is unusual. The anti-angiogenic assays demonstrated that D01 elicited a strong cytotoxic effect and a considerable anti-migratory activity on the vascular cells. Although D02 demonstrated a much weaker cytotoxic effect on the cell lines compared to D01, it elicited a substantial protective effect on the pericytes against CoCl2-induced dropout in an experiment to mimic a micro-environment commonly associated with angiogenesis and tumour growth. These results demonstrate modulatory effects of these propolis samples in vascular cells, which requires further investigation.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844019355987Analytical chemistryNatural product chemistryOrganic chemistryPharmaceutical chemistryCancer researchCell biology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Muhammad Iqbal
Tai-ping Fan
David Watson
Samya Alenezi
Khaled Saleh
Muhamad Sahlan
spellingShingle Muhammad Iqbal
Tai-ping Fan
David Watson
Samya Alenezi
Khaled Saleh
Muhamad Sahlan
Preliminary studies: the potential anti-angiogenic activities of two Sulawesi Island (Indonesia) propolis and their chemical characterization
Heliyon
Analytical chemistry
Natural product chemistry
Organic chemistry
Pharmaceutical chemistry
Cancer research
Cell biology
author_facet Muhammad Iqbal
Tai-ping Fan
David Watson
Samya Alenezi
Khaled Saleh
Muhamad Sahlan
author_sort Muhammad Iqbal
title Preliminary studies: the potential anti-angiogenic activities of two Sulawesi Island (Indonesia) propolis and their chemical characterization
title_short Preliminary studies: the potential anti-angiogenic activities of two Sulawesi Island (Indonesia) propolis and their chemical characterization
title_full Preliminary studies: the potential anti-angiogenic activities of two Sulawesi Island (Indonesia) propolis and their chemical characterization
title_fullStr Preliminary studies: the potential anti-angiogenic activities of two Sulawesi Island (Indonesia) propolis and their chemical characterization
title_full_unstemmed Preliminary studies: the potential anti-angiogenic activities of two Sulawesi Island (Indonesia) propolis and their chemical characterization
title_sort preliminary studies: the potential anti-angiogenic activities of two sulawesi island (indonesia) propolis and their chemical characterization
publisher Elsevier
series Heliyon
issn 2405-8440
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Several studies have previously reported propolis, or its constituents, to inhibit tumour angiogenesis. The anti-angiogenic activity of two Indonesian stingless bee propolis extracts from Sulawesi Island on vascular cells were assessed. Sample D01 was obtained from the outer side of bee hives, while D02 was from the inner side of the same hives. The extracts were profiled by using liquid chromatography coupled to high resolution mass spectrometry. The anti-angiogenic capacity was assessed on HUVECs and placenta-derived pericytes by cell viability, multi-channel wound healing, and CoCl2 based-hypoxia assays. The exact chemical composition has not been confirmed. The most abundant compounds in Indonesian sample D01 seem to be unusual since they do not immediately fall into a clear class. Two of the most abundant compounds have elemental compositions matching actinopyrones. Identification on the basis of elemental composition is not definitive but compounds in D01 are possibly due to unusually modified terpenoids. Sample D02 has abundant compounds which include four related diterpenes with differing degrees of oxygenation and some sesquiterpenes. However, again the profile is unusual. The anti-angiogenic assays demonstrated that D01 elicited a strong cytotoxic effect and a considerable anti-migratory activity on the vascular cells. Although D02 demonstrated a much weaker cytotoxic effect on the cell lines compared to D01, it elicited a substantial protective effect on the pericytes against CoCl2-induced dropout in an experiment to mimic a micro-environment commonly associated with angiogenesis and tumour growth. These results demonstrate modulatory effects of these propolis samples in vascular cells, which requires further investigation.
topic Analytical chemistry
Natural product chemistry
Organic chemistry
Pharmaceutical chemistry
Cancer research
Cell biology
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844019355987
work_keys_str_mv AT muhammadiqbal preliminarystudiesthepotentialantiangiogenicactivitiesoftwosulawesiislandindonesiapropolisandtheirchemicalcharacterization
AT taipingfan preliminarystudiesthepotentialantiangiogenicactivitiesoftwosulawesiislandindonesiapropolisandtheirchemicalcharacterization
AT davidwatson preliminarystudiesthepotentialantiangiogenicactivitiesoftwosulawesiislandindonesiapropolisandtheirchemicalcharacterization
AT samyaalenezi preliminarystudiesthepotentialantiangiogenicactivitiesoftwosulawesiislandindonesiapropolisandtheirchemicalcharacterization
AT khaledsaleh preliminarystudiesthepotentialantiangiogenicactivitiesoftwosulawesiislandindonesiapropolisandtheirchemicalcharacterization
AT muhamadsahlan preliminarystudiesthepotentialantiangiogenicactivitiesoftwosulawesiislandindonesiapropolisandtheirchemicalcharacterization
_version_ 1724783012217880576