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Atypical formations of gintonin lysophosphatidic acids as new materials and their beneficial effects on degenerative diseases

Title
Atypical formations of gintonin lysophosphatidic acids as new materials and their beneficial effects on degenerative diseases
Authors
KimJi-HunLeeRa MiOhHyo-BinTae-YoungRhimHyewhonChoiYoon KyungJong-HoonSeikwanDo-GeunChoIk-HyunNahSeung-Yeol
Ewha Authors
오세관
SCOPUS Author ID
오세관scopus
Issue Date
2024
Journal Title
Journal of Ginseng Research
ISSN
1226-8453JCR Link
Citation
Journal of Ginseng Research vol. 48, no. 1, pp. 1 - 11
Keywords
Degenerative diseasesGinsengginseng-derived neurotrophinGintonin lysophosphatidic acidsNew material
Publisher
Elsevier B.V.
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS; KCI scopus
Document Type
Review
Abstract
Fresh ginseng is prone to spoilage due to its high moisture content. For long-term storage, most fresh ginsengs are dried to white ginseng (WG) or steamed for hours at high temperature/pressure and dried to form Korean Red ginseng (KRG). They are further processed for ginseng products when subjected to hot water extraction/concentration under pressure. These WG or KRG preparation processes affect ginsenoside compositions and also other ginseng components, probably during treatments like steaming and drying, to form diverse bioactive phospholipids. It is known that ginseng contains high amounts of gintonin lysophosphatidic acids (LPAs). LPAs are simple lipid-derived growth factors in animals and humans and act as exogenous ligands of six GTP-binding-protein coupled LPA receptor subtypes. LPAs play diverse roles ranging from brain development to hair growth in animals and humans. LPA-mediated signaling pathways involve various GTP-binding proteins to regulate downstream pathways like [Ca2+]i transient induction. Recent studies have shown that gintonin exhibits anti-Alzheimer's disease and anti-arthritis effects in vitro and in vivo mediated by gintonin LPAs, the active ingredients of gintonin, a ginseng-derived neurotrophin. However, little is known about how gintonin LPAs are formed in high amounts in ginseng compared to other herbs. This review introduces atypical or non-enzymatic pathways under the conversion of ginseng phospholipids into gintonin LPAs during steaming and extraction/concentration processes, which exert beneficial effects against degenerative diseases, including Alzheimer's disease and arthritis in animals and humans via LPA receptors. © 2023
DOI
10.1016/j.jgr.2023.02.004
Appears in Collections:
의과대학 > 의학과 > Journal papers
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