Targeting bioactive compounds in natural extracts - Development of a comprehensive workflow combining chemical and biological data.
Fiche publication
Date publication
septembre 2019
Journal
Analytica chimica acta
Auteurs
Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Dr DELSUC Marc-André
Tous les auteurs :
Ory L, Nazih EH, Daoud S, Mocquard J, Bourjot M, Margueritte L, Delsuc MA, Bard JM, Pouchus YF, Bertrand S, Roullier C
Lien Pubmed
Résumé
In natural product drug discovery, several strategies have emerged to highlight specifically bioactive compound(s) within complex mixtures (fractions or crude extracts) using metabolomics tools. In this area, a great deal of interest has raised among the scientific community on strategies to link chemical profiles and associated biological data, leading to the new field called "biochemometrics". This article falls into this emerging research by proposing a complete workflow, which was divided into three major steps. The first one consists in the fractionation of the same extract using four different chromatographic stationary phases and appropriated elution conditions to obtain five fractions for each column. The second step corresponds to the acquisition of chemical profiles using HPLC-HRMS analysis, and the biological evaluation of each fraction. The last step evaluates the links between the relative abundances of molecules present in fractions (peak area) and the global bioactivity level observed for each fraction. To this purpose, an original bioinformatics script (encoded with R Studio software) using the combination of four statistical models (Spearman, F-PCA, PLS, PLS-DA) was here developed leading to the generation of a "Super list" of potential bioactive compounds together with a predictive score. This strategy was validated by its application on a marine-derived Penicillium chrysogenum extract exhibiting antiproliferative activity on breast cancer cells (MCF-7 cells). After the three steps of the workflow, one main compound was highlighted as responsible for the bioactivity and identified as ergosterol. Its antiproliferative activity was confirmed with an IC of 0.10 μM on MCF-7 cells. The script efficiency was further demonstrated by comparing the results obtained with a different recently described approach based on NMR profiling and by virtually modifying the data to evaluate the computational tool behaviour. This approach represents a new and efficient tool to tackle some of the bottlenecks in natural product drug discovery programs.
Mots clés
Biochemometrics, Liquid chromatography, Mass spectrometry, Metabolomics, Natural products, R script
Référence
Anal. Chim. Acta. 2019 Sep 6;1070:29-42