Subscriber access provided by UNIVERSITY OF TOLEDO LIBRARIES
Bioactive Constituents, Metabolites, and Functions
Inhibitory effect of persimmon tannin on pancreatic lipase and the underlying mechanism in vitro Wei Zhu, yang yang Jia, Jinming Peng, and Chun-mei Li J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.8b00850 • Publication Date (Web): 28 May 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 28, 2018
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 41
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Inhibitory effect of persimmon tannin on pancreatic lipase and the underlying mechanism in vitro Wei Zhu1, Yangyang Jia1, Jinming Peng1, Chun-mei Li1, 2*
1
College of Food Science and Technology, Huazhong Agricultural University, Wuhan,
China, 430070
2
Key Laboratory of Environment Correlative Food Science (Huazhong Agricultural
University), Ministry of Education
*Corresponding author: Chunmei Li (Tel: 86-27-87282966; Fax: 86-27-87282966; E-mail:
[email protected])
1
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
1
Abstract:Pancreatic lipase (PL) is a critical enzyme associated with hyperlipidemia
2
and obesity. Our previous study suggested that persimmon tannin (PT) was the main
3
component accounting for the anti-hyperlipidemic effects of persimmon fruits, but
4
the underlying mechanisms were unclear. In present study, the inhibitory effect of PT
5
on PL was studied and the possible mechanisms were evaluated by fluorescence
6
spectroscopy, circular dichroism (CD) spectra, isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC)
7
and molecular docking. PT had a high affinity to PL and inhibited the activity of PL
8
with the half maximal inhibitory concertation (IC50) value of 0.44 mg/mL in a
9
non-competitive way. Furthermore, molecular docking revealed that the hydrogen
10
bonding and pi-pi stacking was mainly responsible for the interaction. The strong
11
inhibition of PT on PL in gastrointestinal tract might be one mechanism for its
12
lipid-lowering effect.
13
Key words: Persimmon tannin (PT); A-ECG and EGCG dimers; Pancreatic lipase;
14
Fluorescence spectroscopy; Molecular docking; Obesity
15
16
17
18
19
2
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 2 of 41
Page 3 of 41
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
20
Introduction
21
Hyperlipidemia is characterized by an excessive level of lipid in the blood. A large
22
number of epidemiological and clinical studies have demonstrated that
23
hyperlipidemia is an important risk factor for the incidence of atherosclerosis, insulin
24
resistance, diabetes and obesity1, 2. Therefore, its prevention attracts worldwide
25
attention. It was shown that some kind of dietary such as the Mediterranean diet is
26
beneficial for its prevention3, 4. Compared to drugs such as orlistat which have many
27
side effects including flatulence, diarrhea and nausea, dietary factors with significant
28
lipid-lowering effects provide a more suitable strategy to manage hyperlipidemia and
29
its associated diseases. Therefore, novel dietary components with potent
30
anti-hyperlipidemic effects for the prevention of hyperlipidemia have attracted great
31
attention among researchers.
32
Generally, triglyceride is hardly absorbed directly by human intestine before it is
33
hydrolyzed by pancreatic lipase (PL). Therefore, inhibiting PL can effectively reduce
34
the triglyceride absorption in intestinal tract, thus preventing hyperlipidemia and
35
obesity5-7. Natural polyphenols have been received much attention because they are
36
commonly consumed and they have promising inhibitory effects on PL8-10. For
37
example, green tea (-)-epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG) could inhibit PL activity11.
38
Apple oligomeric procyanidins and berry polyphenols were also proved to inhibit the
39
activity of PL and triglyceride absorption6, 12. Persimmon (Diospyros kaki L.) is
3
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
40
cultivated widely in China, Korea and Japan, and it is traditionally used for many
41
medicinal purposes and are related to various health benefits such as anti-oxidant,
42
anti-inflammation and anti-obesity13-15. High molecular weight persimmon tannin
43
(PT) is a highly galloylated, A-linked tannin contained in persimmon fruit, and it is
44
proved to be responsible for the numerous beneficial effects of persimmon16-18. Our
45
previous study suggested that PT is the main component accounting for the
46
anti-hyperlipidemic effects of persimmon fruits17, 19, but the underlying mechanisms
47
are unclear. Considering PT is highly polymerized and it could be hardly absorbed in
48
the small intestine, we proposed that PT might exert its lipid-lowering effect as
49
unabsorbable, complex structures with binding properties that can have local effects
50
in gastrointestinal tract. Therefore, the aim of the study was to evaluate the effects of
51
PT on the inhibition of PL and the possible inhibitory mechanisms. Fluorescence
52
spectroscopy, CD spectra, ITC study and molecular docking approaches were
53
applied to characterize the inhibitory effect and mechanisms. The results would shed
54
a light on the anti-hyperlipidemic mechanism of PT and persimmon fruit as well as
55
related persimmon foodstuffs.
56
Materials and methods
57
Chemicals
58
Porcine pancreatic lipase (100-400 U/mg, Type II, Sigma product L3126) was
59
purchased from Sigma-Aldrich Co. (St. Louis, MO, USA). All other solvents and 4
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 4 of 41
Page 5 of 41
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
60
reagents were obtained from Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co., Ltd. (Shanghai,
61
China) and were of analytical grade.
62
PT and dimers preparation
63
Mature and fully colored fruit of the astringent persimmon (Diospyros kaki Niuxin)
64
was harvested in late November from an orchard in Shan’xi province (China). After
65
harvest, fruit was held at 100 oC for 5 min to inactivate polyphenol oxidase, and then
66
stored deep frozen at -20 oC. The freezing persimmon fruit was cut into slices,
67
methanol extraction combined with macroporous adsorptive resin, lyophilized and
68
then powdered to prepare PT according to our previous reports. PT was
69
characterized by MALDI-TOF, thiolysis-HPLC-ESI-MS and NMR7. The mean
70
degree of polymerization of PT was estimated to be 26 by thiolysis. The proposed
71
structure was identified in our earlier papers7, 20 and was shown in Fig. 1A. The total
72
polyphenols content in PT was 98.7% on a mass basis by Folin–Ciocalteu method21.
73
The characteristic structural elements of PT: epicatechin-3-gallate-(4β→8, 2β→O→
74
7)-epicatechin-3-gallate
75
epigallocatechin-3-gallate-(4β → 8, 2β → O → 7)-epigallocatechin-3-gallate (A-type
76
EGCG dimer, Fig.1C) were separated from persimmon tannin as the method we
77
previously reported22 and were further purified by medium-pressure and
78
high-pressure preparative HPLC. Their purity and identity were confirmed by HPLC
79
and mass spectrometry. The purity of A-type ECG dimer and EGCG dimer were
(A-type
ECG
dimer,
5
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Fig.
1B),
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
80
analyzed by HPLC and calculated to be 96% and 95% using procyanidin A2 as the
81
standard.
82
PL activity inhibition
83
The PL activity was determined by measuring the release rate of oleic acid from
84
triolein using spectrophotometry according to previous method23. Briefly, 21 g of
85
triolein (the substrate) and 100 mL of 4% polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) (the emulator)
86
were completely mixed on a vortex shaker for 5 min to form PVA-oil stock emulsion
87
with a concentration of 0.21 g/mL. 0.05 mL of various concentrations of PT (0.4–2.0
88
mg/mL), 0.05 mL of 0.75 mg/mL PL solution (0.1 mM PBS, pH 7.4) and 1.9 mL
89
PVA-oil substrate emulsion were incubated. After incubating the mixture at 37 °C
90
for30 min, 4 mL of toluene was added to terminate the reaction and extract the
91
generated oleic acid. After the mixture was centrifuged at 4000 r/min for 10 min),
92
and the upper toluene organic layer was taken out and colored by 1 mL of Cu2+ (5%
93
copper acetate, pH 6.1) for 15 min. Then the mixture was centrifuged (4000 r/min 10
94
min) again and the absorbance of the supernatant was measured at 710 nm with a
95
spectrophotometer (Hitachi, Tokyo, Japan). The PL activity was quantified by the
96
amount of oleic acid released. Kinetic parameters such as inhibition constant (Ki),
97
Vmax and inhibition mode were determined from Lineweaver-Burk and Dixon plots.
98
Substrate solution without PL was used as the blank. Each experiment was
99
conducted three times and data were expressed as mean±SD.
6
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 6 of 41
Page 7 of 41
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
100
Fluorescence spectroscopy measurement
101
The effects of PT, A-ECG dimer and A-EGCG dimer on the tryptophan fluorescence
102
spectra of PL were recorded on an F-4600 fluorescence spectrometer (Hitachi, Tokyo,
103
Japan)24. PL was prepared to be 2.0×10-6 M in PBS (0.1 M, pH 7.4), and PT or
104
dimers were in DMSO. An aliquot of PL solution in the absence (use DMSO as
105
control) or presence of PT or dimers (0, 10, 20, 40, 60×10-6 M) was incubated at 37
106
°C for 45 min. The 2-D fluorescence emission spectra were recorded in a 1 cm
107
quartz cell at λex=280 nm. The excitation and emission band widths were 5 nm. The
108
emission spectra were recorded from 300 to 400 nm. The 3-D fluorescence spectra
109
were recorded continuously at the wavelength of Ex/Em=200-600 nm.
110
The emission intensity was corrected for “inner optical filter effect” according the
111
equation25:
112
Fcorr =Fm×10(Aex+Aem) /2
113
Where Fcorr and Fm are the corrected and measured fluorescence, respectively. Aex
114
and Aem are the absorbance value at the excitation (280 nm) and emission (350 nm)
115
wavelength, separately. The intensity of fluorescence used in this study was the
116
corrected fluorescence intensity.
117
The fluorescence quenching mode was analyzed using Stern-Volmer equation and
118
the binding constant was determined from the following formula26:
7
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
119
F0/F=1+Ksv [Q] =1+τ0Kq [Q]
120
Where F0/F is the intensity ratio in the absence or presence of quencher (PT or
121
dimers), [Q] is the concentration of PT or dimers,τ0 is the average life of the
122
emissive excited state of PL (about 10-8 s). Kq is the quenching rate constant, Ksv is
123
the dynamic quenching constant. The Ksv is determined from the slope of
124
Sterm-Volmer plots.
125
According to the value of Kq, we could know the quenching mode was static
126
(complex formation) or dynamic (molecule collision). For the static quenching
127
interaction, the apparent binding constant (Ka) between small molecule and protein
128
and the number of binding sites (n) can be calculated from the static quenching
129
equation27:
130
Log [(F0-F) /F] =log Ka+ nlog [Q]
131
Circular Dichroism (CD) study
132
CD spectra were performed by Jasco-810 spectrophotometer (JASCO, Tokyo, Japan)
133
in cells of 1.0 mm path length28. The PL was prepared as a solution of 2.0×10-6 M in
134
PBS ((0.1 M, pH 7.4). PT, ECG dimer and EGCG dimer were prepared as a stock
135
solution of 20 mM in DMSO. 2 mL of PL solution and 2 µL of PT or dimers were
136
mixed. After incubation the mixture at 37 °C for 30 min, the spectra of samples were
137
measured and recorded from 190 to 250 nm. Three scans were conducted for each
138
spectrum. The SELCON3 method in DICHROWEB was applied to analyze the 8
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 8 of 41
Page 9 of 41
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
139
secondary structure of PL.
140
Isothermal Titration Calorimetry (ITC) study
141
ITC studies were carried out with MicroCal Auto-ITC200 calorimeter (Malvern, UK)
142
at 37 °C according to previous study28. The sample cell and syringe of the
143
calorimeter was washed by working buffer for 2 h before use. PT or dimers of 20
144
µM was set as titrate and PL solution of 0.4 mM was set as titrant. In all, total 20
145
injections of PT and dimers solution were titrated into PL solution at 3 min interval
146
with stirring at 1000 rpm/min. The volume of PT of dimers was 2 µL in each
147
injection. The control experiments were set that the PBS was titrant and PT or
148
dimers suspension was titrate. The raw data were integrated and normalized by use
149
of Origin ver7.0 (MicroCal Inc.).
150
Molecular docking study
151
The docking program Accelrys Discovery Studio (Vers. 2.5) was used to explore the
152
probable interaction between dimers and lipase. The X-ray crystal structure of PL
153
(PDB
154
(http://www.rcsb.org/pdb)29. The structures of ECG and EGCG dimer were created
155
with the Cambridge Soft ChemBioOffice Ultra (Version 14.0) and energy was
156
roughly minimized with a MM2 job. Subsequently, the structure was further
157
optimized by the Hartree-Fock calculations with the 6-31G (d, p) basis set HF/6-31G
158
(d, p)** of GAUSSIAN 09 code. The optimized conformations of A-ECG and
ID:1LPB)
was
retrieved
from
the
RCSB
9
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Protein
Data
Bank
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
159
A-EGCG dimer were shown in Supplementary Fig. S1a, b. Before the docking
160
procedure, water molecules were removed from the crystal structure of PL and the
161
protein was cleaned including correct non-standard amino acids names and
162
incomplete residues, remove alternative conformations, and add hydrogens.
163
Discovery Studio LibDock module was applied to execute the docking. From the
164
docking results, the best scoring docked model which had the lowest docking energy
165
was selected to represent the most favorable binding mode of the compound
166
predicted by Discovery Studio.
167
Statistical analysis
168
All experiments were performed in triplicate, and the results were expressed as mean
169
value ± SD. Duncan’s test (p < 0.05) was applied to analyze the significance by
170
using SPSS Statistics software (Ver 19.0, SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL).
171
Results and discussion
172
Lipase inhibition
173
As shown in Table 1, PT exerted significant inhibitory effect on the PL activity with
174
the IC50 of 0.44 mg/mL. Enzyme kinetics study suggested that the inhibitory mode
175
of the PT towards PL belonged to the non-competitive type and the inhibitory
176
constant (Ki) was calculated to be 0.41 mg/mL. The inhibitory effect of PT on PL
177
was more potent than that of safflower extracts, chiisanoside and senna extract with
178
the IC50 of 0.56, 0.74 and 0.81 mg/mL, respectively30, 31, but it was less potent than 10
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 10 of 41
Page 11 of 41
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
179
orlistat (IC50=1.34 µg/mL), which was a novel clinical cholesterol lowering agent
180
and a positive control used in this study. Although PT is > 300 times less potent than
181
orlistat, the physiological likelihood of effectiveness of PT is possible. According to
182
the IC50 value, 880 mg PT was required to reach the gut (the volume of intestinal
183
juice is estimated to be 2000 mL). In fact, after 1 to 2 medium persimmon fruit
184
(200-300 g) was consumed daily by a person, the total amount of PT in the gut could
185
reach 1200-1800 mg (the content of PT in persimmon fruits is about 3% on dry
186
weight). Therefore, the physiological likelihood of effectiveness would be possible.
187
Although the PL used in this study derived from porcine, we analyzed the homology
188
of PL from porcine and human, and the sequence alignment between porcine
189
pancreatic lipase and human pancreatic lipase was shown in Supplementary Fig. S2.
190
Their sequence identity and similarity reached 86% and 93%, separately. The high
191
sequence homology suggested that PT could be expected to inhibit PL activity in
192
human gut.
193
Fluorescence spectroscopy
194
We used fluorescence spectroscopy to explore the interaction mode between PT and
195
PL. The fluorescence emission spectra of PL at various concentrations of PT
196
following the excitation at 280 nm was shown in Fig. 2. PL contains seven Trp
197
residues which give the intrinsic fluorescence of PL32, therefore, the change in the
198
intrinsic fluorescence intensity of PL can be applied to study interactions between PT
11
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
199
or dimers and PL. As shown in Fig. 2a, there was a clear fluorescence emission peak
200
near 351 nm, which belonged to Trp residues located at protein interior. With the
201
increased concentration (0-60 µM) of PT, the fluorescence intensity of PL was
202
considerably decreased, which was mainly caused by the microenvironment changes
203
of PL due to protein–polyphenol interaction. From 3D fluorescence spectrum of PL
204
(Supplementary Fig. S3), it was clearly observed that PL had two absorption peaks
205
at excitation wavelength of 350 nm (Fig. S3a, the red rectangle), with the addition
206
of PT, the fluorescence emission intensity of PL decreased (Fig. S3b, c). Because the
207
structure of PT is very complex, to study the interaction mechanism between PL and
208
PT is really challenging. To understand the possible mechanism by which PT
209
inhibited PL more fully and the structural requirements of PT for the inhibition, we
210
began with the characteristic structural elements of PT. The two characteristic
211
structural units of PT (A-ECG dimer and A-EGCG dimer) were subsequently used to
212
explore the interaction with PL. From Fig. 2b, c, we could see that 0-60 µM dimers
213
also caused a significant decrease in the fluorescence intensity of PL. Especially for
214
A-ECG dimer, it caused a similar degree of decrease in the fluorescence intensity as
215
that of PT. The 3D fluorescence spectrum of PL with dimers (Fig. S3d-h) revealed
216
that dimers decreased the absorption peaks at excitation wavelength of 350 nm,
217
which was consistent with the effect of PT. Even though the PT, A-ECG dimer and
218
A-EGCG dimer exhibited different quenching effects on PL, the absorption
219
characteristics of PT and dimers with PL was very similar, indicating that PT and 12
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 12 of 41
Page 13 of 41
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
220
dimers might interact with PL in the same mode. The fluorescence quenching
221
parameters for the interactions of PT and dimers with PL were presented in Table 2.
222
The Stern–Volmer plots (Supplementary Fig. S4a, b) for the quenching of PL by
223
PT or dimers showed that they all exhibited a good linear relationship within the
224
studied concentrations, suggesting a single type of quenching, either static or
225
dynamic quenching occurred in the formation of polyphenol–PL complex33. The
226
values of Kq calculated from the plots of linear equation (F0/F vs. [Q]) were 1.09,
227
5.23, 2.04 ×1012 L/(mol·s) for PT, A-ECG and EGCG dimers, separately, which were
228
all
229
macromolecule-participating quenching rate constant in dynamic quenching34.
230
Therefore, we concluded that the process of quenching is not the dynamic quenching
231
induced by the collision of molecules, but the static quenching by forming a complex.
232
We then calculated the binding constant (Ka) of PT to be 6.84×104 L/mol by the
233
slope value of the regression curve based on static quenching plots (Supplementary
234
Fig. S4c). The number of binding sites for the PT-PL complex was approximately
235
equal to 1, suggesting the presence of a single class of PT binding on PL, which was
236
agreement with the results obtained from enzyme kinetics study. As for A-ECG and
237
EGCG dimers, the calculated Ka were 4.04, and 2.77×104 L/mol, separately, and the
238
binding sites were also about 1. PT has a higher Ka value than either dimer,
239
indicating the higher affinity of PT for PL than that of the dimers.
240
CD studies
higher
than
the
maximal
value
(2.0×1010
13
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
L/(mol·s))
for
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
241
The effects of PT and dimers on the secondary structure of PL were evaluated by CD
242
spectroscopy. The percentage of the PL secondary structural elements derived from
243
the spectra were listed in Table 3. We found on complexation of PL with PT, the
244
α-helix content of PL increased from 18 to 67%, the β-sheet content decreased by
245
about 20%, and the unordered structure content decreased from 38 to 27%,
246
suggesting that PT disrupted the PL conformation severely. While adding the same
247
concentration of A-ECG dimer or A-EGCG dimer into PL solution, an increase of
248
α-helix and a decrease of β-sheet was also observed, but the influence of dimers on
249
the secondary structure of PL was less potent than that of PT. These results suggested
250
that the binding of PT and dimers to PL caused conformational changes of the
251
enzyme which was consistent with the result of fluorescence study. The quenching of
252
PL fluorescence with PT and dimers revealed a change in polarity of the fluorophore
253
environment and the CD study also demonstrated the conformation alteration after
254
binding PT or dimers.
255
ITC studies
256
ITC is an attractive approach for studying interactions between bioactive compounds
257
and protein. It sensitively measures the enthalpy changes during ligand and protein
258
interaction in a calorimeter cell held. Additionally, ITC provides thermodynamic
259
properties of protein-ligand interactions by measuring the binding enthalpy
260
changes35. In this study, ITC was applied to determine the thermodynamic properties
14
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 14 of 41
Page 15 of 41
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
261
of the binding interaction of PT or dimers and PL. The results were shown in Fig. 3.
262
It was seen the interaction was typically exothermic. All the curves were typical of
263
enthalpy-driven protein-ligand interactions, with relatively decreasing exothermic
264
peaks and the number of available binding sites on PL upon PT or dimers addition.
265
As analysis listed in the Table 4 , The △G value was negative, indicating the
266
interaction was spontaneous. The Ka of PT was 6.22×104 L/mol, which was slightly
267
lower than the Ka calculated from fluorescence spectroscopy. The difference might
268
be due to the different sensitivity of the methods. The Ka of dimers were 3.98 and
269
2.65×104 L/mol, respectively. In all cases, the binding constants were higher than
270
1×103 L/mol, suggesting a strong interaction between PT and its structural units and
271
PL occurred. This result was in accordance with the data obtained from fluorescence
272
spectroscopy. The enthalpies were too low for covalent bond formation (200−400
273
kJ/mol), which suggested that the interaction of PT or dimers and PL was
274
non-covalent36. The partial immobilization of a protein and ligand occurs in an initial
275
step involving hydrophobic association, which results in a positive ∆S37.
276
Molecular docking studies
277
It is considered that the non-covalent binding is the main mode of the interaction
278
between polyphenols and protein driven by non-covalent forces such as hydrogen
279
bonds or electrostatic interaction. Because PT, A-ECG and EGCG dimers contain
280
various hydroxyl and galloyl groups, the polar phenolic groups might serve as donor
15
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
281
to form hydrogen bonds with polar groups of PL. And results from ITC study also
282
suggested that van der Waals interaction and hydrogen bonding could be formed
283
between PL and PT or dimers, and such non-covalent interaction might result in the
284
conformational change of PL as we observed in the CD study.
285
To confirm whether hydrogen bonds were responsible for the interaction, the
286
molecular docking approach was used. The docking results were presented in Fig. 4.
287
The A-ECG dimer was surrounded by 22 amino acid residues, including ALA-40,
288
LEU-41, ASN-88, LYS-239, ASP-247, ILE-248, ASP-249, GLU-253, GLY-254,
289
ASP-257, ARG-265, LYS-268, THR-271, GLY-330, ASP-331, ALA-332, SER-333,
290
ASN-334, PHE-335, ARG-337, LYS-367 and ASP-389 and hydrogen-bonding
291
interaction was observed with GLU-253, ASP-257, ARG-265, ALA-332, SER-333,
292
ARG-337 and LYS-367 residues of PL. Moreover, two additional pi-interaction was
293
observed between A-ECG dimer and LYS-268 and ARG-337 (Fig. 4A). Similarly,
294
A-EGCG dimer interacted with 13 amino acid residues, such as ILE-248, ASP-249,
295
GLU253, ARG-256, ARG-265, TYR-267, LYS-268, THR-271, ASP-272, ALA-332,
296
SER-333, ASN-334, and PHE-335. ASP-249, TYR-267, SER-333 residues could
297
form hydrogens bonds with EGCG dimer and one pi-π interaction between LYS-268
298
with EGCG dimer (Fig. 4B). These results indicated that the amino acid residues of
299
PL participated in hydrogen bonding and pi–π interaction with the phenolic
300
backbone and the galloyl moieties. The docking results revealed these extensive
301
hydrogen-bonding interactions might play an important role in the strong binding 16
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 16 of 41
Page 17 of 41
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
302
affinity of PT or dimers to lipase.
303
The catalytic site of PL was a SER-HIS-ASP trypsin-like catalytic triad with an
304
active serine being buried under a short helical fragment of a long surface loop38. It
305
was suggested that residues of SER-194, HIS-435, and ASP-320 were the catalytic
306
sites of porcine lipase39. Actually, it was reported that the clinical lipid-lowering drug
307
orlistat exert lipase inhibitory effect by binding with the catalytic residues SER-2340.
308
In contrast, our docking results showed that these residues did not surround ECG
309
dimer or EGCG dimer, indicating the binding mode was non-competitive which was
310
in agreement with the result of enzyme kinetics study.
311
As a crucial enzyme in hydrolysis of triglycerides, PL plays an important role in
312
blood lipid level. Polyphenols from green tea, oolong tea, berry and apple were
313
reported have the capacity to inhibit PL activity6, 12, 41, 42. However, the inhibitory or
314
binding potential of polyphenols on PL is highly related with the structure of
315
polyphenols. It was shown that highly polymeric proanthocyanidins from the seed
316
shells of the Japanese horse chestnut, cranberry and blueberry fruit exerted greater
317
inhibitory effect on PL than EGCG43. Phenols containing galloyl groups had higher
318
binding capacity to proteins44, because each galloyl group provided three hydroxyl
319
groups and a benzene ring, which could form hydrogen and hydrophobic bonds with
320
proteins. In addition, it was also observed that molecular size and flexibility could
321
influence the binding of polyphenols to proteins significantly45, 46. Gonçalves et al.
17
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 18 of 41
322
(2010) suggested that the inhibition of procyanidin fractions on PL increased with
323
degrees of polymerization47. According to previous studies, higher molecular sizes
324
and more abundance of A-type bonds in polymeric proanthocyanidns are key
325
structural requirements of polyphenols for the potent PL inhibition activity which the
326
higher degree of polymerization, the stronger enzyme inhibition activity12, 48. Our
327
previous work showed that PT had a unique structure with highly polymeric (with
328
mean DP of 26), highly galloylated (about 72%) and doubly linked A-type
329
interflavan linkages besides the more common B-type interflavan bonds7. We
330
proposed the high degree of galloylation and polymerization as well as the A-type
331
interflavan bonds of PT might contribute significantly to its gastrointestinal lipase
332
inhibitory effect.
333
Although ECG and EGCG dimers have similar molecular weight and the same
334
number of galloyl groups, they showed different effects on PL. ECG dimer seemed
335
more effective in quenching PL fluorescence, and in altering PL secondary structures.
336
The difference might be due to the difference in the spatial configuration and
337
hydrophobicity property of the two compounds. This result suggested that except for
338
the degree of galloylation and polymerization, other structural characters such as
339
molecular size, hydrophobicity might also affect the binding of polyphenols to PL.
340
Beside the potent inhibition on PL, PT also inhibited starch digesting enzymes such
341
as α-amylase and α-glucosidase effectively49. Previous studies showed that the
342
digestion of carbohydrate may impact on the levels of blood lipid50, 18
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
51
. In the
Page 19 of 41
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
343
digestive tract, when the carbohydrate digestion is inhibited, the blood lipid level
344
would also be affected. The anti-digestive activity of PT on carbohydrate may partly
345
and indirectly contribute to its lipid-lowering effect of PT. Due to the very complex
346
structure of PT, studying the interaction mechanism between enzyme and PT is
347
challenging. Therefore, in exploring the possible mechanism by which PT inhibited
348
PL, we also included the characteristic structural elements of PT (A-type EGCG and
349
ECG dimer), which were proved to be the structTural requirements for the
350
interaction between PT and snake venom PLA252. In our previous studies, we found
351
the IC50 of PT on PLA2 was 0.88 mg/mL, while the values of these two dimers were
352
about 9.0 mg/mL. In our preliminary study, we observed similar tendency on PL.
353
Theses results indicated that polymers were more potent on inhibiting the activitity
354
of enzymes than dimers. Although both A-EGCG dimer and A-ECG dimer did not
355
quench the fluorescence of PL as effective as PT (Fig. 2), and PT has a higher Ka
356
value than either dimer, the effects of A-ECG on PL secondary structure were similar
357
to that of PT. (Table 3). In addition, Although PT had a significant different structure
358
from the dimers and it seemed fetched that results from docking on the dimers gave
359
information on what the PT was doing, data from the enzyme kinetics study
360
demonstrated that the inhibition mode of PT against PL was non-competitive, fitting
361
with the docking results with the dimers well. These results suggested that the PT
362
and dimers might interact with PL in the same mode as that of the dimers. Therefore,
363
data from the characteristic structural dimers might provide some reference for better 19
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
364
understanding the interaction between PT and PL.
365
Generally, enzymes exert catalytic activity only in specific spatial conformations,
366
and when their conformations are altered, their catalytic activity will be greatly
367
influenced. Taken together, the data from the enzymatic kinetics, fluorescence
368
spectroscopy, CD and ITC studies proved that PT had a high affinity to PL and the
369
non-covalent bonding interaction between PT and PL through hydrogen bonds, pi-pi
370
stacking and electrostatic interaction could alter the molecular conformation of PL,
371
thus decreasing the catalytic activity of PL. As the potential inhibitory effect of PT
372
on lipid digestive enzymes, PT as a lipase inhibitor may have potency for the
373
treatment and prevention of obesity.
374
Supporting Information
375
The 3D conformation of A-type ECG and EGCG dimers and their binding with PL
376
and sequence alignment of porcine pancreatic lipase and human pancreatic lipase as
377
well as the 3D fluorescence quenching graphs, Stern-Volmer plots and static
378
quenching plots of PT and dimers.
379
Funding
380
This study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China
381
(No.31571839).
382
Conflict of Interest
20
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 20 of 41
Page 21 of 41
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
383
The authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
384
385
References
386
(1) Hsu, C. L.; Yen, G. C., Phenolic compounds: evidence for inhibitory effects
387
against obesity and their underlying molecular signaling mechanisms. Molecular
388
nutrition & food research 2008, 52, 53-61.
389
(2) Ross, R.; Harker, L., Hyperlipidemia and atherosclerosis. Science 1976, 193,
390
1094-1100.
391
(3) Trichopoulou, A., Mediterranean diet and obesity. EGEA 2004, 39.
392
(4) Garcia, M.; Shook, J.; Kerstetter, J.; Kenny, A.; Bihuniak, J.; Huedo-Medina, T.,
393
The Efficacy of the Mediterranean Diet on Obesity Outcomes: A Meta-Analysis. The
394
FASEB Journal 2015, 29, 254.4.
395
(5) Lowe, M. E., Pancreatic triglyceride lipase and colipase: insights into dietary fat
396
digestion. Gastroenterology 1994, 107, 1524-1536.
397
(6) McDougall, G. J.; Kulkarni, N. N.; Stewart, D., Berry polyphenols inhibit
398
pancreatic lipase activity in vitro. Food Chemistry 2009, 115, 193-199.
399
(7) Martins, F.; Noso, T. M.; Porto, V. B.; Curiel, A.; Gambero, A.; Bastos, D. H.;
400
Ribeiro, M. L.; Carvalho, P. d. O., Maté Tea Inhibits In Vitro Pancreatic Lipase
401
Activity and Has Hypolipidemic Effect on High‐fat Diet‐induced Obese Mice. 21
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
402
Obesity 2010, 18, 42-47.
403
(8) Birari, R. B.; Bhutani, K. K., Pancreatic lipase inhibitors from natural sources:
404
unexplored potential. Drug Discovery Today 2007, 12, 879-889.
405
(9) de la Garza, A. L.; Milagro, F. I.; Boque, N.; Campion, J.; Martinez, J. A.,
406
Natural inhibitors of pancreatic lipase as new players in obesity treatment. Planta
407
Med 2011, 77, 773-85.
408
(10) Buchholz, T.; Melzig, M. F., Polyphenolic Compounds as Pancreatic Lipase
409
Inhibitors. Planta Med 2015, 81, 771-83.
410
(11) Grove, K. A.; Sae ‐ Tan, S.; Kennett, M. J.; Lambert, J. D., (−)−
411
Epigallocatechin‐3‐gallate Inhibits Pancreatic Lipase and Reduces Body Weight
412
Gain in High Fat‐Fed Obese Mice. Obesity 2012, 20, 2311-2313.
413
(12) Sugiyama, H.; Akazome, Y.; Shoji, T.; Yamaguchi, A.; Yasue, M.; Kanda, T.;
414
Ohtake, Y., Oligomeric procyanidins in apple polyphenol are main active
415
components for inhibition of pancreatic lipase and triglyceride absorption. Journal of
416
agricultural and food chemistry 2007, 55, 4604-4609.
417
(13) George, A.; Redpath, S., Health and medicinal benefits of persimmon fruit: A
418
review. Advances in Horticultural Science 2008, 244-249.
419
(14) Gorinstein, S.; Leontowicz, H.; Leontowicz, M.; Jesion, I.; Namiesnik, J.;
420
Drzewiecki, J.; Park, Y.-S.; Ham, K.-S.; Giordani, E.; Trakhtenberg, S., Influence of 22
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 22 of 41
Page 23 of 41
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
421
two
cultivars
of
persimmon
on
atherosclerosis
422
cholesterol-containing diets: Investigation in vitro and in vivo. Nutrition 2011, 27,
423
838-846.
424
(15) Park, Y.-S.; Leontowicz, H.; Leontowicz, M.; Namiesnik, J.; Jesion, I.;
425
Gorinstein, S., Nutraceutical value of persimmon (Diospyros kaki Thunb.) and its
426
influence on some indices of atherosclerosis in an experiment on rats fed
427
cholesterol-containing diet. Advances in Horticultural Science 2008, 250-254.
428
(16) Li, C.; Leverence, R.; Trombley, J. D.; Xu, S.; Yang, J.; Tian, Y.; Reed, J. D.;
429
Hagerman, A. E., High molecular weight persimmon (Diospyros kaki L.)
430
proanthocyanidin: a highly galloylated, A-linked tannin with an unusual flavonol
431
terminal unit, myricetin. Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 2010, 58,
432
9033-9042.
433
(17) Zou, B.; Ge, Z.-z.; Zhang, Y.; Du, J.; Xu, Z.; Li, C.-m., Persimmon tannin
434
accounts for hypolipidemic effects of persimmon through activating of AMPK and
435
suppressing NF-κB activation and inflammatory responses in high-fat diet rats. Food
436
& function 2014, 5, 1536-1546.
437
(18) Tian, Y.; Zou, B.; Li, C.-m.; Yang, J.; Xu, S.-f.; Hagerman, A. E., High
438
molecular weight persimmon tannin is a potent antioxidant both ex vivo and in vivo.
439
Food research international 2012, 45, 26-30.
440
(19) Zou, B.; Li, C.-m.; Chen, J.-y.; Dong, X.-q.; Zhang, Y.; Du, J., High molecular 23
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
indices
in
rats
fed
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
441
weight persimmon tannin is a potent hypolipidemic in high-cholesterol diet fed rats.
442
Food research international 2012, 48, 970-977.
443
(20) Yang, J.; Zhong, L.; Zou, B.; Tian, Y.; Xu, S.-f.; Yao, P.; Li, C.-m.,
444
Spectroscopic investigations on the binding of persimmon tannin to phospholipase
445
A2 from Chinese cobra (Naja naja atra). Journal Of Molecular Structure 2012, 1008,
446
42-48.
447
(21) Gahler, S.; Otto, K.; Böhm, V., Alterations of Vitamin C, Total Phenolics, and
448
Antioxidant Capacity as Affected by Processing Tomatoes to Different Products.
449
Journal Of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 2003, 51, 7962-7968.
450
(22) Dong, X.-q.; Zou, B.; Zhang, Y.; Ge, Z.-z.; Du, J.; Li, C.-m., Preparation of
451
A-type proanthocyanidin dimers from peanut skins and persimmon pulp and
452
comparison of the antioxidant activity of A-type and B-type dimers. Fitoterapia
453
2013, 91, 128-139.
454
(23) Lin, L.; Chan, S.-K.; Tang, Y.; Zhang, F., Study of nicotine acting as an
455
uncompetitive inhibitor of lipase. ACTA CHIMICA SINICA-CHINESE EDITION-.
456
2004, 62, 1003-1006.
457
(24) Soares, S.; Mateus, N.; De Freitas, V., Interaction of different polyphenols with
458
bovine serum albumin (BSA) and human salivary α-amylase (HSA) by fluorescence
459
quenching. Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 2007, 55, 6726-6735.
24
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 24 of 41
Page 25 of 41
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
460
(25) Bi, S.; Yan, L.; Wang, Y.; Pang, B.; Wang, T., Spectroscopic study on the
461
interaction of eugenol with salmon sperm DNA in vitro. Journal of Luminescence
462
2012, 132, 2355-2360.
463
(26) Lakowicz, JR, Principles of Fluorescence Spectroscopy. In Springer US, New
464
York: 2006.
465
(27) Shahabadi, N.; Maghsudi, M.; Rouhani, S., Study on the interaction of food
466
colourant quinoline yellow with bovine serum albumin by spectroscopic techniques.
467
Food chemistry 2012, 135, 1836-1841.
468
(28) Wu, X.; He, W.; Yao, L.; Zhang, H.; Liu, Z.; Wang, W.; Ye, Y.; Cao, J.,
469
Characterization of binding interactions of (−)-epigallocatechin-3-gallate from green
470
tea and lipase. Journal of agricultural and food chemistry 2013, 61, 8829-8835.
471
(29) Egloff, M.-P.; Marguet, F.; Buono, G.; Verger, R.; Cambillau, C.; van Tilbeurgh,
472
H., The 2.46. ANG. Resolution structure of the pancreatic lipase-colipase complex
473
inhibited by a C11 alkyl phosphonate. Biochemistry 1995, 34, 2751-2762.
474
(30)Adisakwattana, S. I., Julnaryn; Hemrid, Araya; Chanathong, Benjanut; Mäkynen,
475
Kittana., Extracts of Edible Plants Inhibit Pancreatic Lipase, Cholesterol Esterase
476
and Cholesterol Micellization, and Bind Bile Acids. Food Technology and
477
Biotechnology 2012, 50, 11-16.
478
(31) Yoshizumi, K.; Hirano, K.; Ando, H.; Hirai, Y.; Ida, Y.; Tsuji, T.; Tanaka, T.;
25
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
479
Satouchi, K.; Terao, J., Lupane-type saponins from leaves of Acanthopanax
480
sessiliflorus and their inhibitory activity on pancreatic lipase. Journal of Agricultural
481
and Food Chemistry 2006, 54, 335-341.
482
(32) Ramos, P.; Coste, T.; Piémont, E.; Lessinger, J. M.; Bousquet, J. A.; Chapus, C.;
483
Kerfelec, B.; Férard, G.; Mély, Y., Time-resolved fluorescence allows selective
484
monitoring of Trp30 environmental changes in the seven-Trp-containing human
485
pancreatic lipase. Biochemistry 2003, 42, 12488-12496.
486
(33) Cheng, Z., Studies on the interaction between scopoletin and two serum
487
albumins by spectroscopic methods. Journal of Luminescence 2012, 132,
488
2719-2729.
489
(34) Zhang, G.; Ma, Y., Mechanistic and conformational studies on the interaction of
490
food dye amaranth with human serum albumin by multispectroscopic methods. Food
491
chemistry 2013, 136, 442-449.
492
(35) Poncet-Legrand, C.; Gautier, C.; Cheynier, V.; Imberty, A., Interactions between
493
flavan-3-ols and poly (L-proline) studied by isothermal titration calorimetry: effect
494
of the tannin structure. Journal of agricultural and food chemistry 2007, 55,
495
9235-9240.
496
(36) Frazier, R. A.; Papadopoulou, A.; Green, R. J., Isothermal titration calorimetry
497
study of epicatechin binding to serum albumin. Journal of pharmaceutical and
498
biomedical analysis 2006, 41, 1602-1605. 26
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 26 of 41
Page 27 of 41
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
499
(37) Ross, P. D.; Subramanian, S., Thermodynamics of protein association reactions:
500
forces contributing to stability. Biochemistry 1981, 20, 3096-3102.
501
(38) Brady, L.; Brzozowski, A. M.; Derewenda, Z. S.; Dodson, E.; Dodson, G., A
502
serine protease triad forms the catalytic centre of a triacylglycerol lipase. Nature
503
1990, 343, 767.
504
(39) Krejci,
505
Cholinesterase-like domains in enzymes and structural proteins: functional and
506
evolutionary relationships and identification of a catalytically essential aspartic acid.
507
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 1991, 88, 6647-6651.
508
(40) Mohapatra, S.; Prasad, A.; Haque, F.; Ray, S.; De, B.; Ray, S. S., In silico
509
investigation of black tea components on α-amylase, α-glucosidase and lipase. 2015.
510
(41) Gondoin, A.; Grussu, D.; Stewart, D.; McDougall, G. J., White and green tea
511
polyphenols inhibit pancreatic lipase in vitro. Food Research International 2010, 43,
512
1537-1544.
513
(42) Nakai, M.; Fukui, Y.; Asami, S.; Toyoda-Ono, Y.; Iwashita, T.; Shibata, H.;
514
Mitsunaga, T.; Hashimoto, F.; Kiso, Y., Inhibitory Effects of Oolong Tea Polyphenols
515
on Pancreatic Lipase in Vitro. Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 2005, 53,
516
4593-4598.
517
(43) Kimura, H.; Ogawa, S.; Akihiro, T.; Yokota, K., Structural analysis of A-type or
E.;
Duval,
N.;
Chatonnet,
A.;
Vincens,
27
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
P.;
Massoulie,
J.,
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 28 of 41
518
B-type highly polymeric proanthocyanidins by thiolytic degradation and the
519
implication in their inhibitory effects on pancreatic lipase. Journal of
520
Chromatography A 2011, 1218, 7704-7712.
521
(44) OKuDA, T.; MORI, K.; HATANO, T., Relationship of the structures of tannins
522
to the binding activities with hemoglobin and methylene blue. Chemical and
523
pharmaceutical bulletin 1985, 33, 1424-1433.
524
(45) Poncet-Legrand,
525
Sarni-Manchado, P.; Vernhet, A., Poly (L-proline) interactions with flavan-3-ols
526
units: Influence of the molecular structure and the polyphenol/protein ratio. Food
527
Hydrocolloids 2006, 20, 687-697.
528
(46) Dobreva, M. A.; Green, R. J.; Mueller-Harvey, I.; Salminen, J.-P.; Howlin, B. J.;
529
Frazier, R. A., Size and molecular flexibility affect the binding of ellagitannins to
530
bovine serum albumin. Journal of agricultural and food chemistry 2014, 62,
531
9186-9194.
532
(47) Gonçalves, R.; Mateus, N.; De Freitas, V., Study of the interaction of pancreatic
533
lipase with procyanidins by optical and enzymatic methods. Journal of agricultural
534
and food chemistry 2010, 58, 11901-11906.
535
(48) Kimura, H.; Ogawa, S.; Niimi, A.; Jisaka, M.; Katsube, T.; Yokota, K.,
536
Inhibition of Fat Digestion by Highly Polymeric Proanthocyanidins from Seed Shells
537
of Japanese Horse Chestnut (Aesculus turbinata BLUME). J Jpn Soc Food Sci 2009,
C.;
Edelmann,
A.;
Putaux,
28
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
J.-L.;
Cartalade,
D.;
Page 29 of 41
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
538
56, 483-489.
539
(49) Li, K.; Yao, F.; Du, J.; Deng, X.; Li, C., Persimmon Tannin Decreased the
540
Glycemic Response through Decreasing the Digestibility of Starch and Inhibiting
541
α-Amylase, α-Glucosidase, and Intestinal Glucose Uptake. Journal of agricultural
542
and food chemistry 2018, 66, 1629-1637.
543
(50) Nestel, P. J.; Carroll, K. F.; Havenstein, N., Plasma triglyceride response to
544
carbohydrates, fats and caloric intake. Metabolism - Clinical and Experimental 1970,
545
19, 1-18.
546
(51) Hodges, R. E.; Krehl, W. A., The Role of Carbohydrates in Lipid Metabolism.
547
The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 1965, 17, 334-346.
548
(52) Zhang, Y.; Zhong, L.; Zhou, B.; Chen, J.-y.; Li, C.-m., Interaction of
549
characteristic structural elements of persimmon tannin with Chinese cobra PLA2.
550
Toxicon 2013, 74, 34-43.
551
552
553
554
555
29
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
556
557
FIGURE CAPTIONS.
558
Fig. 1 The chemical structures of persimmon tannin (PT) and its characteristic
559
structural units A-type ECG dimer and EGCG dimer.
560
561
Fig. 2 Fluorescence quenching effect of PT and A-ECG dimer and A-EGCG dimer
562
on lipase fluorescence intensity, λex = 280 nm; lipase = 2 × 10−6 M; polyphenols
563
concentration increased (a-f) from 0 to 10, 20, 30, 40, and 60 (×10−6 M) at 37 °C.
564
565
Fig. 3 Results of isothermal titration calorimetry for (A) PT and (B) A-ECG dimer
566
and (C) A-EGCG dimer binding to lipase: (upper) raw data plot of heat flow against
567
time for the titration of PT or dimers into lipase; (below) plot of the total heat
568
released as a function of ligand concentration for the titration. The continuous black
569
line represented the best least-squares fit for the obtained data. The thermodynamic
570
parameters analyzed from ITC plots for PT or dimers binding to PL were listed in
571
the table.
572
573
Fig. 4 Best-docked conformations of A-ECG dimer−lipase (A) and A-EGCG
574
dimer-lipase (B) complexes. A-ECG dimer and A-EGCG dimer were shown in line 30
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 30 of 41
Page 31 of 41
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
575
model (the white molecule) while lipase was shown in secondary structure model.
576
The amino acid residues thought to interact with A-ECG dimer and A-EGCG dimer
577
were shown as a 2-D representation by use of 2-D interaction diagram in Discovery
578
Studio. The violet circle represented the residues involved in hydrogen bonds or
579
electrostatic interactions. The green circle represented the residues involved in Van
580
der Waals interaction.
31
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Table 1 Enzymatic Kinetic Parameters of PT against PL Parameters
Values
IC50 (mg/mL)
0.44±0.02
Inhibition type
Non-competitive
Vmax (µmol/(mL·min)) a
a
:
0 mg/mL PT
12.50±0.38a
0.40 mg/mL PT
5.26±0.23b
Vmax was determined at control, 0.4 mg/mL of PT, respectively. The values having different superscripts in the same column
are significantly different (p