Journal of Ethnopharmacology, Volume 308 , 23/05/2023

Deciphering antidiarrheal effects of Meda pata (Litsea glutinosa (Lour.) C.B.Rob.) leaf extract in chemical-induced models of albino rats

Nazifa Anjum, Md Saddam Hossain, Md Atiar Rahman, Md Khalid Juhani Rafi, Abdullah Al Noman, Mirola Afroze, Srabonti Saha, Walla Alelwani, Jitbanjong Tangpong

Abstract

Ethnopharmacological relevance: Diarrhea is one of the leading causes of preventable death in developing countries, mainly caused by bacterial infections and traditional therapies are very common in diarrheal incidences. Meda Pata (Litsea glutionsa) has a long history of use as traditional medicine for diarrhea, dysentery, and spasm in Bangladesh, India, and some other Asian countries. Aim of the study: This research reports the antidiarrheal effects of Meda Pata (Litsea glutinosa leaf extract, LGLEx) in animal models. The work has been supported by in silico molecular docking study to verify the effects. Materials and methods: The antidiarrheal effect of LGLEx was investigated in castor oil-induced diarrhea, magnesium sulfate-induced diarrhea, and gastrointestinal motility test models. Antidiarrheal effects were supported by a molecular docking study through an interaction between LGLEx's GC-MS analyzed imidazole-containing compounds and muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (PDB: 4U14) and 5-HT3 receptor (PDB: 5AIN). Results: LGLEx potentially reduced the diarrheal incidences in in vivo assays reducing gastrointestinal motility. The maximum diarrheal inhibition was obtained in the castor oil-induced model (62.63%) and and BaSO<inf>4</inf>-induced model (73.14%), which were statistically significant (P < 0.05) when compared to the reference drug loperamide. In the castor-oil and BaSO4-induced models, peristaltic movement was reduced by 25.96% and 32.17%, respectively. Biochemical markers particularly IgE, C-reactive proteins, and serum electrolytes were significantly (P < 0.0) restored in treated groups. A Molecular docking analysis revealed that two compounds (1-Ethyl-2-hydroxymethylimidazole and 1,6-Anhydro-beta-D-glucofuranose demonstrated the highest binding affinity with target receptors muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (PDB: 4U14) and 5-HT3 receptor (PDB: 5AIN) confirming their drug likeliness. The findings indicate a high potential antidiarrheal impact that warrants further investigation for its therapeutic application.

Document Type

Article

Source Type

Journal

Keywords

C-reactive proteinDiarrheaGastrointestinal motilityLitsea glutinosaMeda pataMuscarinic receptor

ASJC Subject Area

Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics : Drug DiscoveryPharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics : Pharmacology

Funding Agency

University of Chittagong


Bibliography


Anjum, N., Hossain, M., Rahman, M., Rafi, M., Al Noman, A., Afroze, M., Saha, S., ... Tangpong, J. (2023). Deciphering antidiarrheal effects of Meda pata (Litsea glutinosa (Lour.) C.B.Rob.) leaf extract in chemical-induced models of albino rats. Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 308doi:10.1016/j.jep.2023.116189

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