• Title/Summary/Keyword: white ginseng main root

Search Result 16, Processing Time 0.018 seconds

Studies on the Sterols of Korean Ginseng(I) -On the Contents of Sterols in Neutral Lipid Fraction- (인삼의 Sterol 성분에 관한 연구(I) -중성지질 분획의 Sterol함량 조사-)

  • Kim, Man-Uk;No, Gil-Bong;Wi, Jae-Jun
    • Journal of Ginseng Research
    • /
    • v.9 no.1
    • /
    • pp.64-71
    • /
    • 1985
  • Free and esterified sterols in neutral lipid fractionated from the free lipid of Korean white ginseng (Panax ginseng C.A. Meyer) were analyzed by TLC and GLC to investigate the contents and composition ratios. Content of each sterol was as follows: ${\beta}$-sitosterol was about 51.60 mg%, stigmasterol, 8.93mg% and campesterol, 2.17mg%. Fine root tended to have slightly higher contents of sterols than main root. Linoleic and palmitic acid as the major fatty acids in esterified sterols occupied 70% of the total composition.

  • PDF

Absorption Characteristics of Puffed Red Ginseng Lateral Root, Red Ginseng Main Root and White Ginseng Lateral Root Powder (팽화 홍미삼, 홍삼절편 및 백미삼 분말의 흡습특성)

  • Kim, Sang-Tae;Youn, Kwang-Sup;Kwon, Joong-Ho;Moon, Kwang-Deog
    • Food Science and Preservation
    • /
    • v.15 no.1
    • /
    • pp.30-36
    • /
    • 2008
  • In this study, raw ginseng produced by different method; was puffed and the absorption characteristics of the puffed ginseng powders were investigated Raw ginseng preparations, including white ginseng lateral root (WGL), red ginseng lateral root (RGL) and red ginseng main root (RGM) with 15 % moisture were puffed at a pressure of $7kg_f/cm^2$. The equilibrium moisture contents of puffed powders were affected by temperature and water activity. The monolayer moisture content determined by 1he BET equation was 0.034-0.045g $H_2O/g$ solid. The $R^2$ parameter of 1he BET equation was higher than that of the GAB equation. The absorption enthalpies, calculated using various water activities, showed a decreasing trend with increasing water activity. Amongst models applied for predicting equilibrium moisture content, 1he Kuhn model was 1he best fit for puffed ginseng powders, giving 1he lowest prediction deviation of 2.83-8.65% The prediction model equation for water activity included 1he variable of time, water activity (RH/l00) and temperature, whereas an equation featuring the parameters of time and water activity was the best model equation identified.

Changes in the Chemical Components of Red and White Ginseng after Puffing (팽화 가공에 따른 홍삼과 백삼의 성분변화)

  • Kim, Sang-Tae;Jang, Ji-Hyun;Kwon, Joong-Ho;Moon, Kwang-Deog
    • Food Science and Preservation
    • /
    • v.16 no.3
    • /
    • pp.355-361
    • /
    • 2009
  • In this study, raw ginseng produced by different methods was puffed, and physicochemical properties were analyzed and compared. Raw ginseng included white ginseng lateral root (WGL), red ginseng lateral root (RGL), red ginseng main root (RGM), and red ginseng main root with 15% (w/w) moisture (RGMM). All samples were puffed at a pressure of 7 kg/cm2. Crude saponin content was increased after puffing compared with that of control ginseng. RGM and RGMM showed significant increases in crude saponin content, from 1.67% and 1.41% to 2.84% and 3.09% (all w/w), respectively. However, the ginsenoside content of WGL was decreased after puffing. Rg3, Rh1, and Rh2 values of red ginseng were increased by puffing compared with those of control red ginseng. The total sugar content of ginseng decreased after puffing. The mineral components of puffed ginseng were similar to those of raw ginseng. Levels of total phenolic compounds and antioxidant activities of ginseng were increased after puffing, and electron-donating ability was greatly increased. The acidic polysaccharide content of ginseng increased slightly and the amino acid content decreased due to the high temperature used during puffing.

Studies on the Lipid Components of Fresh Ginseng, Red Ginseng and White Ginseng (수삼(水蔘), 홍삼(紅蔘) 및 백삼(白蔘)의 지방질성분(脂肪質成分)에 관한 연구(硏究))

  • Choi, Kang-Ju;Kim, Dong-Hoon
    • Korean Journal of Pharmacognosy
    • /
    • v.16 no.3
    • /
    • pp.141-150
    • /
    • 1985
  • Lipid and fatty acid compositions of free lipids and bound lipids from fresh ginseng, red ginseng and white ginseng were studied by means of silicic acid column chromatography, thin-layer chromatography and gas-liquid chromatography. Free lipid and bound lipid contents in those three samples were 1.21 to 1.45% and 0.32 to 0.45%. Neutral lipid fractions in free lipids from the samples were 76.6 to 79.7%, while glycolipid and phospholipid fractions were 11.6 to 14.7% and 8.5 to 8.7%, respectively. The major lipids were triglycerides, sterol esters and hydrocarbons, diglycerides and free sterols in neutral lipids, sterol glucoside, monogalactosyl diglyceride, esterified steryl glycoside, digalactosyl diglyceride in glycolipids and phosphatidyl ethanolamine, phosphatidyl glycerol, phosphatidyl choline and phosphatidyl inositol in phospholipids. Fourteen kinds of even numbered and four kinds of odd numbered fatty acids were identified in the four lipid fractions (TL, NL, GL and PL) by GLC, and the main fatty acids were linoleic acid, palmitic acid, oleic acid and linolenic acid.

  • PDF

Recent Studies on the Chemical Constituents of Korean Ginseng (Panax ginseng C. A. Meyer) (고려인삼의 화학성분에 관한 고찰)

  • 박종대
    • Journal of Ginseng Research
    • /
    • v.20 no.4
    • /
    • pp.389-415
    • /
    • 1996
  • Panax ginseng C.A. Meyer(Araliaceae) has been traditionally used as an expensive and precious medicine in oriental countries for more than 5, 000 years. Ginseng saponin isolated from the root of Panax ginseng have been regarded as the main effective components responsible for the pharmacological and biological activities. Such as antiaging effects. antidiabetic effects anticancer effects. Protection against physical and chemical stress. Analgesic and antipyretic effects. Effects on the central nervous system, tranquilizing action and others. Thirty kinds of ginsenosides have been so far isolated from ginseng saponin and their chemical structures have been elucidated since 1960's. Among which protopanaxadiol type is 19 kinds. protopanaxatriol type. 10 kinds and oleanane type, one. Since ginsenosides are generally labile under acidic conditions ordinary acid hydrolysis is always accompanied by many side reactions, such as epimerization. hydroxylation and cyclization of side chain of the sapogenins Especially. it is well known that C-20 glycosyl linkage of ginsenoside was hydrolysed on heating with acetic acid to give an equilibrated mixture of 20(S) and 20(R) epimers. And also, the chemical transformations of the secondary metabolites have appeared during the steaming process to prepare red ginseng. Indicating demalonylation of malonyl ginsenosides, elimination of glycosyl residue at C-20 and isomerization of hydroxyl configuration at C-20. But these studies have not provided a comprehensive picture in explaning how these ginsenosides showed val'iotas pharmacological activities of ginseng. Though some of them have been involved in the mechanism of pharmacological actions. Recently, non-saponin components have received a great deal of attention for their antioxidant, anticancer antidiabetic, immunomodulating. anticomplementary activities and so on. To meet the demand for such wide applications, studies on the non-saponin components play an important role in providing a good evidence of pharmacological and biol ogical activities. Among the non-saponin constituents of Korean ginseng, polyacetylenes, phenols. Sesquiterpenes, alkaloids. polysaccharides oligosaccharides, oligopeptides and aminoglycosides together with ginsenosides of terrestrial part are mainly described.

  • PDF

Change of Ginsenoside Profiles in Processed Ginseng by Drying, Steaming, and Puffing

  • Shin, Ji-Hye;Park, Young Joon;Kim, Wooki;Kim, Dae-Ok;Kim, Byung-Yong;Lee, Hyungjae;Baik, Moo-Yeol
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
    • /
    • v.29 no.2
    • /
    • pp.222-229
    • /
    • 2019
  • Korean ginseng (Panax ginseng Meyer) was processed by drying, steaming, or puffing, and the effects of these processes on the ginsenoside profile were investigated. The main root of 4-year-old raw Korean ginseng was dried to produce white ginseng. Steaming, followed by drying, was employed to produce red or black ginseng. In addition, these three varieties of processed ginseng were puffed using a rotational puffing gun. Puffed ginseng showed significantly higher extraction yields of ginsenosides (49.87-58.60 g solid extract/100 g of sample) and crude saponin content (59.40-63.87 mg saponin/g of dried ginseng) than non-puffed ginseng, respectively. Moreover, puffing effectively transformed the major ginsenosides (Rb1, Rb2, Rc, Rd, Re, and Rg1) of ginseng into minor ones (F2, Rg3, Rk1, and Rg5), comparable to the steaming process effect on the levels of the transformed ginsenosides. However, steaming takes much longer (4 to 36 days) than puffing (less than 30 min) for ginsenoside transformation. Consequently, puffing may be an effective and economical technique for enhancing the extraction yield and levels of minor ginsenosides responsible for the major biological activities of ginseng.