1. Academic Validation
  2. Heat shock factor 1 inducers from the bark of Eucommia ulmoides as cytoprotective agents

Heat shock factor 1 inducers from the bark of Eucommia ulmoides as cytoprotective agents

  • Chem Biodivers. 2013 Jul;10(7):1322-7. doi: 10.1002/cbdv.201200401.
Joo-Won Nam 1 Seo-Young Kim Taesook Yoon Yoo Jin Lee Yun-Seo Kil Yun-Sil Lee Eun-Kyoung Seo
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 The Center for Cell Signaling & Drug Discovery Research, College of Pharmacy, Ewha Womans University, Seoul, Korea.
Abstract

The barks of Eucommia ulmoides (Eucommiae Cortex, Eucommiaceae) have been used as a traditional medicine in Korea, Japan, and China to treat hypertension, reinforce the muscles and bones, and recover the damaged liver and kidney functions. Among these traditional uses, to establish the recovery effects on the damaged organs on the basis of phytochemistry, the barks of E. ulmoides have been investigated to afford three known phenolic compounds, coniferaldehyde glucoside (1), bartsioside (2), and feretoside (3), which were found in the family Eucommiaceae for the first time. The compounds 1-3 were evaluated for their inducible activities on the heat shock factor 1 (HSF1), and heat shock proteins (HSPs) 27 and 70, along with four compounds, geniposide (4), geniposidic acid (5), pinoresinol diglucoside (6), and liriodendrin (7), which were previously reported from E. ulmoides. Compounds 1-7 increased expression of HSF1 by a factor of 1.214, 1.144, 1.153, 1.114, 1.159, 1.041, and 1.167 at 3 μM, respectively. Coniferaldehyde glucoside (1) showed the most effective increase of HSF1 and induced successive expressions of HSP27 and HSP70 in a dose-dependent manner without cellular cytotoxicity, suggesting a possible application as a HSP inducer to act as cytoprotective agent.

Keywords

Coniferaldehyde; Cytoprotective activity; Eucommia ulmoides; Glucosides; Heat shock factor.

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