Journal article

In Silico Molecular Docking Analysis, Cytotoxicity, and Antibacterial Activities of Constituents of Fruits of Cucumis dipsaceus


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Author list: Assefa, Tesso, Ramachandran, Guta, Demissie, Ombito, Eswaramoorthy, Melaku

Publication year: 2024

Journal name in source: ACS omega

Volume number: 9

Issue number: 1

Start page: 1945

End page: 1955

Number of pages: 11

ISSN: 2470-1343



Cucumis dipsaceus (Cucurbitaceae) is a plant traditionally used against diarrhea, teeth-ach, wounds, stomach ache, meningitis, and cancer. The extracts of C. dipsaceus after silica gel column chromatography gave nine compounds identified using spectroscopic methods such as hexacosane (1), octadecane (2), 17-(-5-ethyl-2,6-dihydroxy-6-methylhept-3-en-2-yl)-9-(hydroxymethyl)-13-methylcyclopenta[α]phenanthren-3-ol (3), erythrodiol (4), (9,12)-propyl icosa-9,12-dienoate (5), α-spinasterol (6), 16-dehydroxycucurbitacin (7), cucurbitacin D (8), and 23,24-dihydroisocucurbitacin D (9). Compounds 3 and 4 are new to the genus Cucumis. α-Spinasterol showed better inhibition zone diameter = 13.67 ± 0.57, 15.00 ± 0.10, and 13.33 ± 0.57 mm against Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Streptococcus pyogenes compared with the other tested samples. α-Spinasterol (−8.0 kcal/mol) and 3 (−7.6 kcal/mol) displayed high binding affinity against DNA Gyrase compared to ciprofloxacin (−7.3 kcal/mol). α-Spinasterol and 16-dehydroxycucurbitacin showed better binding affinity against protein kinase. The cytotoxicity results revealed that the EtOAc extract showed the highest potency with IC50 = 16.05 μg/mL. 16-Dehydroxycucurbitacin showed a higher binding affinity (−7.7 kcal/mol) against human topoisomerase IIβ than etoposide. The cytotoxicity and antibacterial activities and in silico molecular docking analysis displayed by the constituents corroborate the traditional use of the plant against bacteria and cancer.


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Last updated on 2025-16-07 at 15:07