• Title/Summary/Keyword: plant sterol

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Chemical Constituents of Gomphrena globosa. II

  • Dinda, Biswanath;Ghosh, Biplab;Achari, Basudev;Arima, Shiho;Sato, Nariko;Harigaya, Yoshihiro
    • Natural Product Sciences
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    • v.12 no.2
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    • pp.89-93
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    • 2006
  • One new sterol glucoside, $gomphsterol\;{\beta}-D-glucoside$ 1 along with known compounds, ${\beta}-sitosterol$, stigmasterol, campesterol, $stigmasterol-{\beta}-D-glucoside$, friedelin, 3-epi-friedelinol, allantoin, and $chrysoeriol-7-O-{\beta}-D-glucoside$ have been isolated from the aerial parts of Gomphrena globosa (Amaranthaceae). On the basis of spectroscopic (including 2D NMR) and chemical studies, the structure of 1 was elucidated as $(22E,24S)-24-ethylcholesta-7,9(11),22-trien-3{\beta}-ol-3-O-{\beta}-D-glucopyranoside$. Known compounds are reported for the first time from this plant species.

Triterpenoids from the Flower of Viburnum opulus var. clavescens for. sterile (불두화(Viburnum opulus var. clavescens for. sterile) 꽃의 트리테르페이드 성분)

  • Choi, Seong Yeon;Kim, Myong Jo;Chun, Wanjoo;Kwon, Yongsoo
    • Korean Journal of Pharmacognosy
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    • v.53 no.3
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    • pp.133-137
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    • 2022
  • Four known triterpenoids and one sterol glycoside were isolated from Viburnum opulus var. clavescens for. sterile flowers. By the spectral data analysis, we determined to be the structures of isolated compounds as 𝛼-amyrin (1), ursolic aldehyde (2), maslinic acid (3), ursolic acid (4) and 𝛽-sitosterol-3-O-glucoside (5). Among the isolated compounds, we revised 13C-NMR chemical shifts of ursolic aldehyde (2) using DEPT and HMBC spectra analysis. 𝛼-Amyrin (1), ursolic aldehyde (2), maslinic acid (3) and 𝛽-sitosterol-3-O-glucoside (5) were isolated for the first time from this plant.

High-performance liquid chromatography analysis of phytosterols in Panax ginseng root grown under different conditions

  • Lee, Dong Gu;Lee, Jaemin;Kim, Kyung-Tack;Lee, Sang-Won;Kim, Young-Ock;Cho, Ik-Hyun;Kim, Hak-Jae;Park, Chun-Gun;Lee, Sanghyun
    • Journal of Ginseng Research
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    • v.42 no.1
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    • pp.16-20
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    • 2018
  • Background: The Panax ginseng plant is used as an herbal medicine. Phytosterols of P. ginseng have inhibitory effects on inflammation-related factors in HepG2 cells. Methods: Phytosterols (e.g., stigmasterol and ${\beta}$-sitosterol) in the roots of P. ginseng grown under various conditions were analyzed using high-performance liquid chromatography. The P. ginseng roots analyzed in this study were collected from three cultivation areas in Korea (i.e., Geumsan, Yeongju, and Jinan) and differed by cultivation year (i.e., 4 years, 5 years, and 6 years) and production process (i.e., straight ginseng, red ginseng, and white ginseng). Results: The concentrations of stigmasterol and ${\beta}$-sitosterol in P. ginseng roots were 2.22-23.04 mg/g and 7.35-59.09 mg/g, respectively. The highest concentrations of stigmasterol and ${\beta}$-sitosterol were in the roots of 6-year-old P. ginseng cultivated in Jinan (82.14 mg/g and 53.23 mg/g, respectively). Conclusion: Six-year-old white ginseng and white ginseng cultivated in Jinan containing stigmasterol and b-sitosterol are potentially a new source of income in agriculture.

Molecular Cloning and Characterization of the Yew Gene Encoding Squalene Synthase from Taxus cuspidata

  • Huang, Zhuoshi;Jiang, Keji;Pi, Yan;Hou, Rong;Liao, Zhihua;Cao, Ying;Han, Xu;Wang, Qian;Sun, Xiaofen;Tang, Kexuan
    • BMB Reports
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    • v.40 no.5
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    • pp.625-635
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    • 2007
  • The enzyme squalene synthase (EC 2.5.1.21) catalyzes a reductive dimerization of two farnesyl diphosphate (FPP) molecules into squalene, a key precursor for the sterol and triterpene biosynthesis. A full-length cDNA encoding squalene synthase (designated as TcSqS) was isolated from Taxus cuspidata, a kind of important medicinal plants producing potent anti-cancer drug, taxol. The full-length cDNA of TcSqS was 1765 bp and contained a 1230 bp open reading frame (ORF) encoding a polypeptide of 409 amino acids. Bioinformatic analysis revealed that the deduced TcSqS protein had high similarity with other plant squalene synthases and a predicted crystal structure similar to other class I isoprenoid biosynthetic enzymes. Southern blot analysis revealed that there was one copy of TcSqS gene in the genome of T. cuspidata. Semi-quantitative RT-PCR analysis and northern blotting analysis showed that TcSqS expressed constitutively in all tested tissues, with the highest expression in roots. The promoter region of TcSqS was also isolated by genomic walking and analysis showed that several cis-acting elements were present in the promoter region. The results of treatment experiments by different signaling components including methyl-jasmonate, salicylic acid and gibberellin revealed that the TcSqS expression level of treated cells had a prominent diversity to that of control, which was consistent with the prediction results of TcSqS promoter region in the PlantCARE database.

A New Sterol Regulatory Element Binding Protein, SrbB Is Critical for Hypoxia Adaptation and Virulence in the Human Fungal Pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus

  • Chung, Dawoon;Barker, Bridget M.;Carey, Charles C.;Merriman, Brittney;Werner, Ernst R.;Lechner, Beatrix E.;Dhingra, Sourabh;Cheng, Chao;Xu, Wenjie;Blosser, Sara J.;Morohashi, Kengo;Mazurie, Aurelien;Mitchell, Thomas K.;Haas, Hubertus;Mitchell, Aaron P.;Cramer, Robert A.
    • 한국균학회소식:학술대회논문집
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    • 2015.05a
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    • pp.15-15
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    • 2015
  • Aspergillus fumigatus is a major cause of invasive aspergillosis (IA), a significant health issue worldwide with high mortality rates up to 95%. Our lab is interested in how A. fumigatus adapts to low oxygen conditions 'hypoxia', which is one of the important host microenvironments. A. fumigatus SrbA is a basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) transcriptional regulator and belongs to sterol regulatory element binding protein (SREBP) family members. Loss of SrbA completely blocks growth in hypoxia and results in avirulence in murine models of IA suggesting an essential role of SrbA in hypoxia adaptation and virulence in A. fumigatus. We conducted chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing (ChIP-seq) with A. fumigatus wild type using a SrbA specific antibody, and 97 genes were revealed as SrbA direct targets. One of the 'SrbA regulons' (AFUB_099590) was a putative bHLH transcriptional regulator whose sequence contained a characteristic tyrosine substitution in the basic portion of the bHLH domain of SREBPs. Therefore, we designated AFUB_099590 SrbB. Further characterization of SrbB demonstrated that SrbB is important for radial growth, biomass production, and biosynthesis of heme intermediates in hypoxia and virulence in A. fumigatus. A series of quantitative real time PCR showed that transcription of several SrbA regulons is coordinately regulated by two SREBPs, SrbA and SrbB in hypoxia. This suggests that SrbA and SrbB have both dependent and independent functions in regulation of genes responsible for hypoxia adaptation in A. fumigatus. Together, our data provide new insights into complicated roles of SREBPs in adaptation of host environments and virulence in pathogenic fungi.

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Ethanol Extract of Hippophae Rhamnoides L. Leaves Inhibits Adipogenesis through AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) Activation in 3T3-L1 Preadipocytes (비타민나무 잎 에탄올추출물의 AMPK 활성화를 통한 3T3-L1 지방전구세포의 adipogenesis 억제효과)

  • Jeong, Hyeon Ju;Park, Ju Hee;Kim, Myong-Jo
    • Korean Journal of Plant Resources
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    • v.28 no.5
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    • pp.582-590
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    • 2015
  • In the present study, we investigated the effect of 70% EtOH extract from Hippophae Rhamnoides L. leaves (HRL) on the anti-obesity effect in 3T3-L1 cells. The effects of HRL on lipid accumulation in 3T3-L1 cells were examined using Oil Red O staining. In addition, we examined the gene expression levels by using RT-PCR and western blot. The results of this analysis showed that 100 ㎍/㎖ HRL significantly increased the inhibition of lipid accumulation by 82.25%; significantly decreased the mRNA expression of sterol regulatory element binding protein-1c (SREBP-1c), peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPARγ), CCAAT/enhancer binding proteins α (C/EBPα), and fatty acid synthase (FAS) in 3T3-L1 cells as well as the stimulated protein expression of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK); and suppressed the expression level of PPARγ. These results suggest that HRL can prevent adipogenesis through activation of AMPKα and inhibition of adipogenesis transcription factors.

Development of Biologically Active Compounds from Edible Plant Sources XVIII. Isolation of Derivatives of Ergosterol from the Fruit Body of Phellinus linteus (식용 식물자원으로부터 활성물질의 탐색-XVIII. 상황버섯 (Phellinus linteus) 자실체로부터 Ergosterol 유도체의 분리)

  • Lyu, Ha-Na;Yoo, Jong-Su;Song, Myoung-Chong;Lee, Dae-Young;Kim, Dong-Hyun;Rho, Young-Duk;Kim, In-Ho;Baek, Nam-In
    • Applied Biological Chemistry
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    • v.50 no.1
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    • pp.57-62
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    • 2007
  • The fruiting body of Phellinus linteus was extracted with 80% aqueous MeOH, and the concentrated extract was partitioned with EtOAc, n-BuOH and $H_2$O. The repeated silica gel and ODS column chromatographies of the EtOAc fraction led to isolation of four sterols. From the result of spectral data including NMR, MS and IR, the chemical structures of the sterols were determined as ergosta-7,24(28)-dien-3${\beta}$-ol (episterol, 1), 5${\alpha}$,8${\alpha}$-epidioxyergosta-6,9(11),22-trien-3${\beta}$-ol (dehydrop-eroxyergosterol, 2), 5${\alpha}$,8${\alpha}$-epidioxyergosta-6,22-dien-3${\beta}$-ol (ergoterol peroxide, 3), and $3{\beta}$,$5{\alpha}$-dihydroxy-6${\beta}$-methoxyergosta-7,22-diene (6-O-methylcerevisterol, 4). The ergosterols have been first isolated from this mushroom in this study.

Metabolic Engineering of the Brassinosteroid Biosynthetic Pathways (Brassinosteroid의 대사공학)

  • LEE Mi-Ock;SONG Ki-Hong;LEE Hyun-Kyung;JUNG Ji-Yoon;CHOE Vit-Nary;CHOE Sunghw
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society of Plant Biotechnology Conference
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    • 2002.04a
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    • pp.69-75
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    • 2002
  • Sterols play two major roles in plants: a bulk component in biological membranes and precursors of plant steroid hormones. Physiological effects of plant steroids, brassinosteroids (BRs), include cell elongation, cell division, stress tolerance, and senescence acceleration. Arabidopsis mutants that carry genetic defects in BR biosynthesis or its signaling display characteristic phenotypes, such as short robust inflorescences, dark-green round leaves, and sterility. Currently there are more than 100 dwarf mutants representing 7 genetic loci in Arabidopsis. Mutants of 6 loci, dwf1/dim1/cbb1, cpd/dwf3, dwf4, dwf5, det2/dwf6, dwf7 are rescued by exogenous application of BRs, whereas bri1/dwf2 shares phenotypes with the above 6 loci but are resistant to BRs. These suggest that the 6 loci are defective in BR biosynthesis, and the one locus is in BR signaling. Biochemical analyses, such as intermediate feeding tests, examining the levels of endogenous BR, and molecular cloning of the genes revealed that dwf7, dwf5, and dwf1 are defective in the three consecutive steps of sterol biosynthesis, from episterol to campesterol via 5-dehydroepisterol. Similarly, det2/dwf6, dwf4, and cpd/dwf3 were shown to be blocked in $D^4$ reduction, 22a-hydroxylation, and 23 a-hydroxylation, respectively. A signaling mutant bri1/dwf2 carries mutations in a Leucine-rich repeat receptor kinase. Interestingly, the bri1 mutant was shown to accumulate significant amount of BRs, suggesting that signaling and biosynthesis are dynamically coupled in Arabidopsis. Thus It is likely that transgenic plants over-expressing the rate-limiting step enzyme DWF4 as well as blocking its use by BRI1 could dramatically increase the biosynthetic yield of BRs. When applied industrially, BRs will boost new sector of plant biotechnology because of its potential use as a precursor of human steroid hormones, a novel lead compound for cholesterol-lowering effects, and a various application in plant protection.

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Metabolic Engineering of the Brassinosteroid Biosynthetic Pathways (Brassinosteroid의 대사공학)

  • Lee, Mi-Ock;Song, Ki-Hong;Lee, Hyun-Kyung;Jung, Ji-Yoon;Choe, Vit-Nary;Choe, Sung-Hwa
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society of Plant Biotechnology Conference
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    • 2002.04b
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    • pp.69-75
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    • 2002
  • Sterols play two major roles in plants: a bulk component in biological membranes and precursors of plant steroid hormones. Physiological effects of plant steroids, brassinosteroids (BRs), include cell elongation, cell division, stress tolerance, and senescence acceleration. Arabidopsis mutants that carry genetic defects in BR biosynthesis or its signaling display characteristic phenotypes, such as short robust inflorescences, dark-green round leaves, and sterility. Currently there are more than 100 dwarf mutants representing 7 genetic loci in Arabidopsis. Mutants of 6 loci, dwf1/dim1/cbb1, cpd/dwf3, dwf4, dwf5, det2/dwf6, dwf7 are rescued by exogenous application of BRs, whereas bri1/dwf2 shares phenotypes with the above 6 loci but are resistant to BRs. These suggest that the 6 loci are defective in BR biosynthesis, and the one locus is in BR signaling. Biochemical analyses, such as intermediate feeding tests, examining the levels of endogenous BR, and molecular cloning of the genes revealed that dwf7, dwf5, and dwf1 are defective in the three consecutive steps of sterol biosynthesis, from episterol to campesterol via 5-dehydroepisterol. Similarly, det2/dwf6, dwf4, and cpd/dwf3 were Shown to be blocked in $D^4$ reduction, 22a-hydroxylation, and 23 a-hydroxylation, respectively. A signaling mutant bri1/dwf2 carries mutations in a Leucine-rich repeat receptor kinase. Interestingly, the bri1 mutant was shown to accumulate significant amount of BRs, suggesting that signaling and biosynthesis are dynamically coupled in Arabidopsis. Thus it is likely that transgenic plants over-expressing the rate-limiting step enzyme DWF4 as well as blocking its use by BRI1 could dramatically increase the biosynthetic yield of BRs. When applied industrially, BRs will boost new sector of plant biotechnology because of its potential use as a precursor of human steroid hormones, a novel lead compound for cholesterol-lowering effects, and a various application in plant protection.

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Metabolic Engineering of the Brassinosteroid Biosynthetic Pathways (Brassinosteroid의 대사공학)

  • Lee, Mi-Ock;Song, Ki-Hong;Lee, Hyun-Kyung;Jung, Ji-Yoon;Choe, Vit-Nary;Choe, Sung-Hwa
    • Journal of Plant Biotechnology
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    • v.29 no.2
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    • pp.139-144
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    • 2002
  • Sterols play two major roles in plants: a bulk component in biological membranes and precursors of plant steroid hormones. Physiological effects of plant steroids, brassinosteroids (BRs), include cell elongation, cell division, stress tolerance, and senescence acceleration. Arabidopsis mutants that carry genetic defects in BR biosynthesis or its signaling display characteristic phenotypes, such as short robust inflorescences, dark-green round leaves, and sterility. Currently there are more than 100 dwarf mutants representing 7 genetic loci in Arabidopsis. Mutants of 6 loci, dwf1/dim1/cbb1, cpd/dwf3, dwf4, dwf5, det2/dwf6, dwf7 are rescued by exogenous application of BRs, whereas bri1/dwf2 shares phenotypes with the above 6 loci but are resistant to BRs. These suggest that the 6 loci are defective in BR biosynthesis, and the one locus is in BR signaling. Biochemical analyses, such as intermediate feeding tests, examining the levels of endogenous BR, and molecular cloning of the genes revealed that dwf7, dwf5, and dwf1 are defective in the three consecutive steps of sterol biosynthesis, from episterol to campesterol via 5-dehydroepisterol. Similarly, det2/dwf6, dwf4, and cpd /dwf3 were shown to be blocked in D$^4$reduction, 22a-hydroxylation, and 23 a-hydroxylation, respectively. A signaling mutant bril/dwf2 carries mutations in a Leucine-rich repeat receptor kinase. Interestingly, the bri1 mutant was shown to accumulate significant amount of BRs, suggesting that signaling and biosynthesis are dynamically coupled in Arabidopsis. Thus it is likely that transgenic plants over-expressing the rate-limiting step enzyme DWF4 as well as blocking its use by BRIl could dramatically increase the biosynthetic yield of BRs. When applied industrially, BRs will boost new sector of plant biotechnology because of its potential use as a precursor of human steroid hormones, a novel lead compound for cholesterol-lowering effects, and a various application in plant protection.