1. Academic Validation
  2. Biginkgosides A-I, Unexpected Minor Dimeric Flavonol Diglycosidic Truxinate and Truxillate Esters from Ginkgo biloba Leaves and Their Antineuroinflammatory and Neuroprotective Activities

Biginkgosides A-I, Unexpected Minor Dimeric Flavonol Diglycosidic Truxinate and Truxillate Esters from Ginkgo biloba Leaves and Their Antineuroinflammatory and Neuroprotective Activities

  • J Nat Prod. 2016 May 27;79(5):1354-64. doi: 10.1021/acs.jnatprod.6b00061.
Guang-Lei Ma Juan Xiong Guo-Xun Yang Li-Long Pan Chang-Ling Hu Wei Wang 1 Hui Fan 2 Qiu-Hua Zhao 2 Hai-Yan Zhang 1 Jin-Feng Hu
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 State Key Laboratory of Drug Research, Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica, Chinese Academy of Sciences , No. 555 Zuchongzhi Road, Shanghai 201203, People's Republic of China.
  • 2 School of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, East China Normal University , No. 500 Dongchuan Road, Shanghai 200241, People's Republic of China.
Abstract

Nine unexpected new flavonol glycoside cyclodimers in the truxinate (1-7, biginkgosides A-G, respectively) or truxillate [biginkgosides H (8) and I (9)] forms were isolated as minor components from the extract of Ginkgo biloba leaves. The new dimers possess an unusual cyclobutane ring formed by a [2+2]-cycloaddition between two symmetric (for compounds 1-5 and 7-9) or nonsymmetric (for 6) flavonol coumaroyl glucorhamnosides. A plausible biosynthetic pathway for these new compounds based on the frontier molecular orbital theory of cycloaddition reactions is briefly discussed. An antineuroinflammatory screening revealed that biginkgosides E (5) and H (8) inhibited nitric oxide production in lipopolysaccharide-activated BV-2 microglial cells, with IC50 values of 2.91 and 17.23 μM, respectively. Additionally, biginkgoside F (6) showed a significant neuroprotective effect (34.3% increase in cell viability at 1 μM) against Aβ25-35-induced cell viability decrease in SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells.

Figures