Anthocyanins, one of the flavonoid subtypes, are a large family of water-soluble phytopigments and have a wide range of health-promoting benefits. Recently, an anthocyanin-rich compound from blueberries was reported to possess protective property against bone loss in ovariectomized (OVX) animal models. However, the active ingredients in the anthocyanin compound have not been identified. Here we show that delphinidin, one of the major anthocyanidins in berries, is a potent active ingredient in anti-osteoporotic bone resorption through the suppression of osteoclast formation. In vitro examinations revealed that delphinidin treatment markedly inhibited the differentiation of RAW264.7 cells into osteoclasts compared with other anthocyanidins, cyanidin and peonidin. Oral administration of delphinidin significantly prevented bone loss in both RANKL-induced osteoporosis model mice and OVX model mice. We further provide evidence that delphinidin suppressed the activity of NF-κB, c-fos, and Nfatc1, master transcriptional factors for osteoclastogenesis. These results strongly suggest that delphinidin is the most potent inhibitor of osteoclast differentiation and will be an effective agent for preventing bone loss in postmenopausal osteoporosis.
Cancers producing colony-stimulating factors and associated with marked leukocytosis are relatively rare. Wereport here a case of a thyroid cancer producing both granulocyte colonystimulating factor (G-CSF) and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF). A 72-year-old womanhad a thyroid carcinoma with significant neutrophilia and eosinophilia without any evidence of infection. The serum concentrations of both G-CSFand GM-CSF were elevated significantly in this patient, which might have induced the leukocytosis. Furthermore, the G-CSF concentrations in thyroid tumor tissue and metastatic lesions in the lung and skin examined at autopsy also were extremely high. (Internal Medicine 35: 815-820, 1996)
A novel ninhydrin-positive compound, N-methyl-D-aspartic acid, was identified in the muscle extracts of the blood shell, Scapharca broughtonii. This compound is already known to have potent neuroexcitatory activity, inducing hypermotility and strong releasing action of serum luteinizing hormone in mammals. This may be, however, the first finding of N-methyl-D-aspartic acid in natural products.
An electrophoretic transfer technique was used to investigate qualitatively the production of antibodies to Strongyloides stercoralis larvae in 56 patients with strongyloidiasis. SDS-PAGE analysis of the larval extract revealed the presence of at least 33-39 polypeptide bands under either reducing or non-reducing condition. In the immunoblot analysis, almost all patients showed positive reactivity to the polypeptide bands. The reactivity, however, revealed significant variation among the patients, ranging in number of bands from only one to more than 18. Among the bands, 4 with molecular sizes of 97, 66, 41 and 26 kDa were frequently recognized by the patients' sera, indicating that these antigenic components may form an available antigen for immunological testing for strongyloidiasis. On the other hand, the reactivities were very faint in cases of overwhelming strongyloidiasis.
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