Botanical dietary supplements contain
multiple bioactive compounds
that target numerous biological pathways. The lack of uniform standardization
requirements is one reason that inconsistent clinical effects are
reported frequently. The multifaceted biological interactions of active
principles can be disentangled by a coupled pharmacological/phytochemical
approach using specialized (“knock-out”) extracts. This
is demonstrated for hops, a botanical for menopausal symptom management.
Employing targeted, adsorbent-free countercurrent separation, Humulus lupulus extracts were designed for pre- and postmenopausal
women by containing various amounts of the phytoestrogen 8-prenylnaringenin
(8-PN) and the chemopreventive constituent xanthohumol (XH). Analysis
of their estrogenic (alkaline phosphatase), chemopreventive (NAD(P)H-quinone
oxidoreductase 1 [NQO1]), and cytotoxic bioactivities revealed that
the estrogenicity of hops is a function of 8-PN, whereas their NQO1
induction and cytotoxic properties depend on XH levels. Antagonization
of the estrogenicity of 8-PN by elevated XH concentrations provided
evidence for the interdependence of the biological effects. A designed
postmenopausal hop extract was prepared to balance 8-PN and XH levels
for both estrogenic and chemopreventive properties. An extract designed
for premenopausal women contains reduced 8-PN levels and high XH concentrations
to minimize estrogenic while retaining chemopreventive properties.
This study demonstrates the feasibility of modulating the concentrations
of bioactive compounds in botanical extracts for potentially improved
efficacy and safety.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.