ISOLATION OF DIOSGENIN FROM Smilax kraussiana MEISN EX. KRAUSS AND SYNTHESIS OF ITS DERIVATIVES AS ANTICANCER AGENTS
Date
2015-08
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Plants remain a major source of novel drugs for the treatment of various diseases like
cancer. The search for safe anticancer drugs from plants has led to the discovery of
camptothecin and taxol. Smilax kraussiana is used in herbal medicine to treat tumors,
veneral and skin diseases. Many plants including S. kraussiana are still underexploited
despite their ethnomedicinal properties. This study was designed to isolate and characterise
the constituents of S. kraussiana, synthesise active derivatives from the most bioactive
isolate and evaluate the anticancer activities of the extracts and compounds.
The leaves and stems of S. kraussiana were collected from Onigambari Forest Reserve,
Ibadan and authenticated at Forestry Research Institute of Nigeria (Voucher number: FHI
108799), Ibadan, Oyo State. The samples were air-dried, pulverized and successively
extracted with hexane, ethyl acetate and methanol. The extracts were subjected to
chromatographic techniques to obtain pure isolates. Structural elucidation of the isolated
compounds was done using 1D, 2D Nuclear Magnetic Resonance and Mass Spectroscopic
methods. Isolated diosgenin was synthetically modified by oxidation, reduction, and
condensation reactions. The extracts, isolates and synthesised compounds were evaluated
for anticancer activities against four human cancer cell lines; leukaemic (K-562), hepatic
(WRL), breast (MCF-7) and colorectal carcinoma (COLO) at 20, 50 and 100 µM
concentrations using 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide and
Sorphordamine assays. Tamoxifen was used as positive control for both assays. Data were
analysed using descriptive statistics.
The successive extraction of S. kraussiana with hexane, ethyl acetate and methanol yielded
14.0, 20.0 and 11.5 g of the extracts respectively. Chromatographic separation of hexane,
ethyl acetate and methanol extracts resulted in four, nine and six compounds respectively.
The isolates are mainly triterpenoids, steroids and fatty acids, while the most abundant
isolate was diosgenin (3β-hydroxy-5-spirostene) (80.0 mg = 0.5 %). The modification of
diosgenin via two synthetic reaction schemes yielded fifteen and twelve compounds
respectively. The new analogues obtained from the first scheme included (22β)-25-oxo-27-
nor-furost-5-en-3β-acetate, (22β)-25-hydroxy-3β-yl-27-nor-furost-5-en-3β-acetate, (22β)-
(Z)-26-(4′-nitrobenzylidene)-3β-yl-furost-5-en-3β-acetate, (22β)-26-(3′,4′,5′-
ii
trimethoxybenzylidene)-3β-yl-furost-5-en-3β-acetate, 3β-acetoxy-furost-5-en-26-aldoxime
and 3β-acetoxy-27-nor-furost-5-en-25-ketoxime. The new compounds from the second
scheme included (22β,25R)-3β-acetoxy-spirost-5-en-7-one, (22β,25R)-3β-acetoxy-spirost-
5-en-7-ketoxime, (22β,25R)-spirost-3,5-dien-7-one, (22β,25R)-3β-acetoxy-7-(4′-
nitrobenzylidene)-spirost-5-en-3β-yl, (22β,25R)-3β-acetoxy-spirost-5-en-3β-yl-7-(ethyl-3′-
propanoate)-ketoxime and (22β,25R)-3β-acetoxy-spirost-5-en-3β-yl-7-(ethyl-4′-butyrate)-
ketoxime. Nineteen out of the 27 synthesised compounds are reported for the first time.
Ethyl acetate and methanol extracts of S. kraussiana exhibited cytotoxic activity against
WRL and COLO cell lines with IC50 of 46.1 and 90.0 µM, but showed low inhibition on
K-562 and MCF-7 with IC50 of 113.0 and 236.0 µM respectively. Hexane extract exhibited
low activity against the four cell lines with IC50 between 130.0 and 310.0 µM. The most
bioactive isolate, diosgenin showed cytotoxic activity against the four cell lines by
suppressing the viability of cells with IC50 between 12.3 and 38.0 µM, while active
synthesised compounds inhibited the growth of the four cell lines with IC50 between 7.5
and 35.5 µM.
The phytochemical constituents of Smilax kraussiana extracts justify their use in herbal
medicine. The isolated compounds are reported for the first time from the plant. The
synthesised diosgenin derivatives could serve as lead compounds for further investigation
as anticancer agents.
Description
A thesis in the Department of Chemistry Submitted to the Faculty of Science In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY of the UNIVERSITY OF IBADAN
Keywords
Smilax kraussiana, Human cell-lines, (22β,25R)-3β-acetoxy-spirost-5-en-3β-yl-7-(ethyl-3′-propanoate)-ketoxime, (22β)-25-oxo-27-nor-furost-5-en-3β-acetate, (22β)-26-(3′,4′,5′-trimethoxybenzylidene)- 3β-yl-furost-5-en-3β-acetate, Diosgenin