Assessing anti-inflammatory activities and compounds in switchgrass (Panicum virgatum)

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Authors

Ho, Khanh-Van
Efrat, Novianus
Schreiber, Kathy L.
Vo, Phuc H.
De Canha, Marco Nuno
Van Staden, Analike Blom
Oosthuizen, Carel Basson
Twilley, Danielle
Lei, Zhentian
Sumner, Lloyd W.

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Publisher

MDPI

Abstract

Switchgrass is a bioenergy feedstock that potentially possesses multiple health benefits. However, the biological properties and associated bioactive compounds of switchgrass have not been adequately investigated. In the current study, we assessed the anti-inflammatory properties of switchgrass. Results from in vitro bioassays indicated that the methanolic extracts of switchgrass contained compounds exerting inhibitory effects on the expression of inflammatory mediators (TNF- , IL-6, IL-8, and IL-10) induced in the U-937 model system. The extracts derived from four switchgrass cultivars (Alamo, Kanlow, Liberty, and Show Me) inhibited the secretion of all inflammatory mediators examined, with the only exception of the Liberty extract, which showed no significant effect on IL-10 expression. The degree of cytokine inhibition was variable, depending on the particular cultivar, the concentrations tested, and the cytokines examined. A global metabolomics approach was utilized to putatively identify possible molecules with known anti-inflammatory capacities in different switchgrass cultivars using ultra-high performance liquid chromatography with high-resolution mass spectrometry (UHPLC-HRMS). The content of multiple bioactive antiinflammatory compounds in switchgrass was determined by liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC–MS/MS) analyses. Our results suggest that switchgrass, particularly the Alamo and Kanlow cultivars, may represent a promising natural anti-inflammatory source for the cosmetic, nutraceutical, and pharmaceutical industries.

Description

SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL : TABLE S1: Putative identification of the secondary metabolites with known anti-inflammatory activities in switchgrass through untargeted metabolomics analyses.; TABLE S2: In vitro biological activities of the extracts derived from the four switchgrass cultivars. Antibacterial and antimycobacterial activities were evaluated against 2 bacterial strains Cutibacterium acnes and Mycobacterium smegmatis, respectively. Anticancer activity was investigated using human colorectal adenocarcinoma (HT-29) and human malignant melanoma (UCT-MEL-1) cell lines.

Keywords

Switchgrass, Metabolomic profiling, Anti-inflammatory compounds, Anti-inflammatory activity, Bioactive compounds

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Citation

Ho, K.-V.; Efrat, N.; Schreiber, K.L.; Vo, P.H.; De Canha, M.N.; van Staden, A.B.; Payne, B.D.; Oosthuizen, C.B.; Twilley, D.; Lei, Z.; et al. Assessing Anti-Inflammatory Activities and Compounds in Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum). Agriculture 2022, 12, 936. https://DOI.org/10.3390/agriculture12070936.