Oral vitamin E supplementation has been reported to improve facial hyperpigmentation. alpha-Tocopheryl ferulate (alpha-TF) is a compound of alpha-tocopherol (alpha-T) and ferulic acid connected by an ester bond. Ferulic acid is also an antioxidant, and could scavenge free radicals induced by ultraviolet (UV) radiation, and thus maintain the long-lasting antioxidative effect of alpha-T. Previously we have reported that alpha-TF inhibited melanogenesis in human melanoma cells. To know whether alpha-TF might be useful as a whitening agent to improve and prevent facial hyperpigmentation, the depigmenting effect of alpha-TF in normal human melanocytes was examined in this study. The results showed that 30 microg/ml of alpha-TF dissolved in 150 microg/ml of lecithin inhibited melanization significantly without inhibiting cell growth. This phenotypic change was associated with the inhibition of tyrosinase and the degree of inhibition was dose dependent. No significant effect on DOPAchrome tautomerase (DT) activity was observed. These results suggest that alpha-TF is a candidate for an efficient whitening agent which suppresses melanogenesis. In this paper, the role of alpha-T and alpha-TF in inhibiting biological reactions induced by reactive oxygen species (ROS) is also discussed.
Development of complementary and/or alternative drugs for treatment of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is still much needed from clinical and economic points of view. Antiviral substances obtained from medicinal plants are potentially good targets to study. Glycyrrhiza uralensis and G. glabra have been commonly used in both traditional and modern medicine. In this study, extracts of G. uralensis roots and their components were examined for anti-HCV activity using an HCV cell culture system. It was found that a methanol extract of G. uralensis roots and its chloroform fraction possess anti-HCV activity with 50%-inhibitory concentrations (IC 50 ) of 20.0 and 8.0 mg/mL, respectively. Through bioactivity-guided purification and structural analysis, glycycoumarin, glycyrin, glycyrol and liquiritigenin were isolated and identified as anti-HCV compounds, their IC 50 being 8.8, 7.2, 4.6 and 16.4 mg/mL, respectively. However, glycyrrhizin, the major constituent of G. uralensis, and its monoammonium salt, showed only marginal anti-HCV activity. It was also found that licochalcone A and glabridin, known to be exclusive constituents of G. inflata and G. glabra, respectively, did have anti-HCV activity, their IC 50 being 2.5 and 6.2 mg/mL, respectively. Another chalcone, isoliquiritigenin, also showed anti-HCV activity, with an IC 50 of 3.7 mg/mL. Time-ofaddition analysis revealed that all Glycyrrhiza-derived anti-HCV compounds tested in this study act at the post-entry step. In conclusion, the present results suggest that glycycoumarin, glycyrin, glycyrol and liquiritigenin isolated from G. uralensis, as well as isoliquiritigenin, licochalcone A and glabridin, would be good candidates for seed compounds to develop antivirals against HCV.
The inhibitory effect of arbutin, a naturally occurring beta-D-glucopyranoside derivative of hydroquinone, on melanogenesis was studied biochemically by using human melanocytes in culture. Cells were cultured in the presence of different concentrations of arbutin. The maximum concentration of arbutin that was not inhibitory to growth of the cells was 100 micrograms/ml. At that concentration, melanin synthesis was inhibited significantly by approximately 20% after 5 days, compared with untreated cells. This phenotypic change was associated with the inhibition of tyrosinase and DHICA polymerase activities, and the degree of inhibition was dose dependent. No significant difference in DOPAchrome tautomerase (DT) activity was observed before or after arbutin treatment. Western blotting experiments revealed there were no changes in protein content or in molecular size of tyrosinase, TRP-1 or TRP-2, indicating that inhibition of tyrosinase activity by arbutin might be due to effects at the post-translational level.
Melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH) receptor binding activity and melanocortin-1 receptor (MC1-R) gene expression on normal human melanocytes have been studied as responses to the effects of ultraviolet B (UVB), interleukin-1 (IL-1), endothelin-1 (ET-1) and tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), which are known as UV sensitive regulators of melanocytic function. MSH receptor (MSH-R) binding activity was upregulated by UVB, IL-1alpha, -1beta and ET-1, but was downregulated by TNF-alpha. Northern blot analysis showed that MC1-R mRNA expression was induced 24 h after UVB irradiation in a dose-dependent manner, and that 24-h treatment with ET-1 also induced an expression of MC1-R mRNA, whereas TNF-alpha downregulated the expression. In addition, IL-1alpha and -1beta have a small but real inductive effect on MC1-R mRNA expression. Taken together, our results suggest a model in which higher MC1-R mRNA expression is accompanied by upregulation of MSH-R binding activity, and enhanced by UVB or cytokines sensitive to UVB. Such a regulatory system would enable normal human melanocytes to respond to MSH more efficiently and induce an increase of melanization of the skin through the MSH/MSH-R system after UVB radiation.
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