| Literature DB >> 12843655 |
Ho-Jin Heo1, Young-June Park, Young-Min Suh, Soo-Jung Choi, Mi-Jeong Kim, Hong-Yon Cho, Yun-Jeong Chang, Bumshik Hong, Hye-Kyung Kim, Eunki Kim, Chang-Ju Kim, Byung-Gee Kim, Dong-Hoon Shin.
Abstract
We screened 50 Korean traditional natural plants to measure the activation effect on choline acetyltransferase and attenuation of scopolamine-induced amnesia. The methanolic extracts from Zizyphus jujuba among the tested 50 plants, showed the highest activatory effect (34.1%) on choline acetyltransferase in vitro. By sequential fractionation of Zizyphus jujuba, the active component was finally identified as cis-9-octadecenoamide (oleamide). After isolation, oleamide showed a 65% activation effect. Administration of oleamide (0.32%) to mice significantly reversed the scopolamine-induced memory and/or cognitive impairment in the passive avoidance test and Y-maze test. Injection of scopolamine to mice impaired performance on the passive avoidance test (31% decrease in step-through latency), and on the Y-maze test (16% decrease in alternation behavior). In contrast, mice treated with oleamide before scopolamine injection were protected from these changes (12-25% decrease in step-through latency; 1-10% decrease in alternation behavior). These results suggest that oleamide should be a useful chemo-preventive agent against Alzheimer's disease.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 12843655 DOI: 10.1271/bbb.67.1284
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosci Biotechnol Biochem ISSN: 0916-8451 Impact factor: 2.043