• Title/Summary/Keyword: E. stolonifera

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Impact of Ecklonia stolonifera extract on in vitro ruminal fermentation characteristics, methanogenesis, and microbial populations

  • Lee, Shin Ja;Jeong, Jin Suk;Shin, Nyeon Hak;Lee, Su Kyoung;Kim, Hyun Sang;Eom, Jun Sik;Lee, Sung Sill
    • Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences
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    • v.32 no.12
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    • pp.1864-1872
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    • 2019
  • Objective: This study was conducted to evaluate the effects of Ecklonia stolonifera (E. stolonifera) extract addition on in vitro ruminal fermentation characteristics, methanogenesis and microbial populations. Methods: One cannulated Holstein cow ($450{\pm}30kg$) consuming timothy hay and a commercial concentrate (60:40, w/w) twice daily (09:00 and 17:00) at 2% of body weight with free access to water and mineral block were used as rumen fluid donors. In vitro fermentation experiment, with timothy hay as substrate, was conducted for up to 72 h, with E. stolonifera extract added to achieve final concentration 1%, 3%, and 5% on timothy hay basis. Results: Administration of E. stolonifera extract to a ruminant fluid-artificial saliva mixture in vitro increased the total gas production. Unexpectedly, E. stolonifera extracts appeared to increase both methane emissions and hydrogen production, which is contrasts with previous observations with brown algae extracts used under in vitro fermentation conditions. Interestingly, real-time polymerase chain reaction indicated that as compared with the untreated control the ciliate-associated methanogen and Fibrobacter succinogenes populations decreased, whereas the Ruminococcus flavefaciens population increased as a result of E. stolonifera extract supplementation. Conclusion: E. stolonifera showed no detrimental effect on rumen fermentation characteristics and microbial population. Through these results E. stolonifera has potential as a viable feed supplement to ruminants.

Dietary Fiber Content of Different Thallus Regions and Age in Three Brown Algae: Laminaria japonica, Ecklonia stolonifera and E. cava (대형갈조류 다시마, 곰피 및 감태의 엽체부위 및 연령별 식이섬유 함량)

  • Hwang, Eun-Kyoung;Park, Chan-Sun
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.42 no.4
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    • pp.360-365
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    • 2009
  • The dietary fiber and crude fiber contents of different thallus regions (blade, stipe, and holdfast) in three brown algae (Laminaria japonica, Ecklonia stolonifera, and E. cava) were detennined at different ages, and then compared with one another. On a dry matter basis, the soluble dietary fiber (SDF) content was highest ($10.8{\pm}0.5%$) in the holdfast of 2-year old L. japonica, and the insoluble dietary fiber (IDF), total dietary fiber (TDF), and crude fiber (CF) contents were highest in the holdfast of 2-year old E. cava at $44.5{\pm}0.7%$, $50.2{\pm}0.5%$, $6.8{\pm}0.7%$, respectively. The IDF, TDF, and CF contents of these three species were measured in the following order: holdfast > stipe > blade, and the SDF contents of L. japonica exhibited the reverse of this trend. The TDF/CF ratio of 1-year old L. japonica, E. stolonifera, and E. cava was greater than was observed in the corresponding 2-year old samples. This is, to the best of our knowledge, the first report demonstrating that the holdfasts of L. japonica, E. stolonifera, and E. cava are rich in dietary fiber contents, especially IDF, TDF, and CF.

Antibacterial Activity of the Phaeophyta Ecklonia stolonifera on Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus

  • Eom, Sung-Hwan;Kang, Min-Seung;Kim, Young-Mog
    • Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.11 no.1
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    • pp.1-6
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    • 2008
  • In an effort to discover an alternative therapeutic agent against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), several medicinal plants and seaweeds were evaluated for its antibacterial activity against MRSA. A methanolic extract of the Phaeophyta Ecklonia stolonifera exhibited significant antibacterial activity against MRSA. To perform more detailed investigation on antibacterial activity, the methanol extract of E. stolonifera was further fractionated with organic solvents such as hexane, dimethylchloride, ethyl acetate, and n-butanol. Among them, the hexane fraction showed the strongest antibacterial activity against MRSA strains with MIC from 500 to $600 {\mu}g/mL$. The fraction also exhibited a bactericidal activity against MRSA, indicating that E. stolonifera contains a bactericidal substance against MRSA.

Dietary Intake and Accumulation of Phlorotannins in Abalone after Feeding the Phaeophyte Ecklonia stolonifera (전복에서의 갈조류 곰피의 섭취 및 phlorotannin 축적)

  • Bangoura, Issa;Hong, Yong-Ki
    • Journal of Life Science
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    • v.25 no.7
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    • pp.780-785
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    • 2015
  • Dietary intake and bioavailability of phorotannins in abalone was investigated after feeding with the phlorotannin-rich brown seaweed Ecklonia stolonifera after 4 days starvation. Reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) affords isolation and quantification of the major phlorotannins of 7-phloroeckol and eckol, which were identified by mass spectrometry and nuclear magnetic resonance. Abalone growth and feed consumption rates were similar when fed either with the E. stolonifera or the common feed seaweed Saccharina japonica for 20 days. Throughout the feeding period, 7-phloroeckolol was accumulated in the abalone flesh tissue up to an average of 0.58±0.13 mg/g dry weight after 6 days. Eckol was reached to 0.25±0.05 mg/g dry tissue after 6 days, and maintained the level until end of feeding period. By feeding S. japonica as a control, no phlorotannins were detected in the abalone tissues. Both of the abalone, fed with E. stolonifera or S. japonica, had enzymes that decomposed 7-phloroeckol and eckol in muscle tissues, with similar degradation rates of −0.05 or less and −0.05 mg/ml/hr, respectively. Phlorotannins were reduced by constitutive enzymes in abalone tissues. Therefore, value-added abalone containing bioactive phlorotannins can be produced by simply changing the feed to the phlorotannin-rich brown seaweed E. stolonifera 6 days before harvest.

Health beneficial effects of brown algae ecklonia stolonifera in liver (갈조류 곰피(Ecklonia stolonifera)의 간 건강기능성)

  • Yu, Seungmin;Kim, Wooki
    • Food Science and Industry
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    • v.51 no.4
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    • pp.334-342
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    • 2018
  • People in Korea, a peninsular, have acquired a variety of marine food resources including seaweeds. Ecklonia stolonifera, a brown algae, is commonly dwelling in Korean coasts and their cultivation methods were developed for a mass-production. Recently, studies have revealed that Ecklonia stolonifera is a promising material for the development of health functional foods. In an effort to carefully review the current understating in the effects and mechanisms of Ecklonia stolonifera on liver functions by deduction from relevant literatures, the effective components were identified as phlorotannins, including dieckol, eckstolonol, eckol, phlorofucofuroeckol A, and phlorosterol. Their aiding action on the hepatic functions is categorized as follows. A) Regulation of oxidative stress by anti-oxidant capacity, B) Protection of hepatocytes from toxins, C) Prevention of alcoholic fatty liver and fibrogenesis, D) Regulation of chronic disease by improvement of inflammatory responses and lipid metabolisms, and E) indirect benefit conferred by a personal total wellness.

Inhibition of Xanthine Oxidase by Seaweed Extracts (해조류 추출물의 Xanthine Oxidase 저해작용)

  • 김외경;이태기;박영범;박덕천;이용우;여생규;김인수;박영호;김선봉
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Science and Nutrition
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    • v.25 no.6
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    • pp.1069-1073
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    • 1996
  • Inhibition of xanthine oxidase by seaweed extracts obtained from Undaria pinnatifida, Ecklonia stolonifera, Ecklonia cava, Laminaria japonica, Sargassum, Codiumfragile, Enteromorpha compressa and Porphyra tenera were investigated. Extracts of E. stolonifera and E. mua remarkably inhibited xanthine oxidase activity compared to those of other seaweed. The xanthine oxidase inhibitory activity of E. cava was higher than that of E. stolonifera. Diethyl ether extract from E. cava was more effective in the inhibition of xanthine oxidase than other solvent extracts. Two xanthine oxidase inhibitors(A-1 and A-2) from diethyl ether extract were isolated and purified by silica gel column chromatography, thin layer chromatography and high performance liquid chromatography. Xanthine oxidase inhibitory activities of these compounds were 27.8 and 48.1% per 0.4mg, respectively. The active compound A-2 had absorption peak at 420nm, 456nm and 467nm, which can be considered as siphonaxanthine.

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Inhibitory Phlorotannins from the Edible Brown Alga Ecklonia stolonifera on Total Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) Generation

  • Kang, Hye-Sook;Chung, Hae-Young;Kim, Ji-Young;Son, Byeng-Wha;Jung, Hyun-Ah;Choi, Jae-Sue
    • Archives of Pharmacal Research
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    • v.27 no.2
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    • pp.194-198
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    • 2004
  • Reactive oxygen species (ROS) play an important role in the pathogenesis of many human degenerative diseases such as cancer, aging, arteriosclerosis, and rheumatism. Much attention has been focused on the development of safe and effective antioxidants. To discover sources of antioxidative activity in marine algae, extracts from 17 kinds of seaweed were screened for their inhibitory effect on total ROS generation in kidney homogenate using 2',7'-dichlorofluorescein diacetate (DCFH-DA). ROS inhibition was seen in three species: UIva pertusa, Symphyocladia latiuscula, and Ecklonia stolonifera. At a final concentration of 25 $\mu\textrm{g}$/mL, U. pertusa inhibited 85.65$\pm$20.28% of total ROS generation, S. latiscula caused 50.63$\pm$0.09% inhibitory, and the Ecklonia species was 44.30$\pm$7.33% inhibition. E. stolonifera OKAMURA (Lam-inariaceae), which belongs to the brown algae, has been further investigated because it is commonly used as a foodstuff in Korea. Five compounds, phloroglucinol (1), eckstolonol (2), eckol (3), phlorofucofuroeckol A (4), and dieckol (5), isolated from the ethyl acetate soluble fraction of the methanolic extrclct of E. stolonifera inhibited total ROS generation.

A new phlorotannin from the brown alga Ecklonia stolonifera

  • Kang, Hye-Sook;Chung, Hae-Young;Jung, Jee-Hyung;Son, Byeng-Wha;Choi, Jae-Sue
    • Proceedings of the PSK Conference
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    • 2003.04a
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    • pp.265.3-266
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    • 2003
  • Ecklonia stolonifera Okamura is a member of the family Laminariaceae, belonging to the order Laminariales. Previously we reported that the methanolic extract of the brown alga E stolonifera exerts antioxidative activity on 1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) radical. In the course of a continuous study on the active principles of this alga, a new phlorotannin, named eckstolonol (2), was isolated along with the four known phlorotannins i.e. (omitted)

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Inducing the Regeneration and Maturation of Free-living Gametophytes of Ecklonia stolonifera Okamura (Laminariales, Phaeophyta) (대형갈조류 곰피 (Ecklonia stolonifera Okamura) 유리배우체의 재생 및 성숙 유도)

  • Hwang, Eun-Kyoung;Gong, Yong-Gun;Ha, Dong-Soo;Park, Chan-Sun
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.43 no.3
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    • pp.231-238
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    • 2010
  • The Induction of regeneration and maturation in the free-living gametophytes of Ecklonia stolonifera Okamura was studied at four temperatures (5, 10, 15, and $20^{\circ}C$), four levels of irradiance (5, 10, 20, and 40 ${\mu}mol\;m^{-2}s^{-1}$) and three photoperiods (14:10, 12:12, and 10:14 h L:D). Female gametophyte fragments were maintained in active regeneration without reaching sexual maturity under $5{\sim}10^{\circ}C$, 10 ${\mu}mol\;m^{-2}s^{-1}$, 10:14 h (L:D), whereas the conditions for male gametophytes were slightly different at $20^{\circ}C$, 40 ${\mu}mol\;m^{-2}s^{-1}$, 10:14 h (L:D). The sexual maturation of female and male gametophytes was facilitated at $15^{\circ}C$, 20 ${\mu}mol\;m^{-2}s^{-1}$, 14:10 h (L:D). These results provide basic information for controlling the regeneration and maturation of the free-living gametophytes for artificial seed production of E. stolonifera.

Experimental Design in Laboratory for Ecological Restoration in the Slag Dumping Area

  • Kim, Jin-Man;Kwak, Seck-Nam
    • Journal of Environmental Science International
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    • v.18 no.10
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    • pp.1065-1070
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    • 2009
  • Experimental design for ecological restoration approach was investigated from the P' company's slag dumping area with higher pH value. The degree of pH recovery was measured by the injection of carbon dioxide from the LNG exhaust gas, and the residual carbon, for example, calcium and carbonate which can be controlled by artificial seaweed beds. The degree of adaptability from 3 algaes (Undaria pinnatifida, Sargassum horneri and Ecklonia stolonifera) and uptake nutrient function of Ecklonia stolonifera chosen in the first treatment were measured in the laboratory to determine the transplanting algae in artificial seaweed beds. The higher value of pH was decreased to 7.0~8.5 by injection of LNG exhaust gas with flow rate $20\;m^3/min$. In the experiment design at laboratory, the upper part of frond of Undaria pinnatifida and Sargassum horneri began to decay, and the color changed after 10 days. However, those of Ecklonia stolonifera were after 14~20 days. The uptake rate of nutrient from Ecklonia stolonifera was higher than those of other algaes, and those was similar pattern in the control (e.g. seawater); The DIN concentration uptake of Ecklonia stolonifera was $1.88\;{\mu}g/L/hr$ avg. in leachate, but $2.19\;{\mu}g/L/hr$ avg. in seawater. However, the ${PO_4}^3$-P concentration uptake was $0.18\;{\mu}g/L/hr$ avg. in leachate, but $0.31\;{\mu}g/L/hr$ avg. in seawater. These result indicated Ecklonia stolonifera uptaked these nutrients in the leachate as well as in seawater, and it may suggested for this species to transplant for constructing artificial seaweed beds.