Reversed micelles were used to extract lectin from red kidney beans and factors affecting reverse micellar systems (pH value, ionic strength and extraction time) were studied. The optimal conditions were extraction at pH 4-6, back extraction at pH 9-11, ion strength at 0.15 M NaCl, extraction for 4-6 minutes and back extraction for 8 minutes. The reverse micellar system was compared with traditional extraction methods and demonstrated to be a time-saving method for the extraction of red kidney bean lectin. Mitogenic activity of the lectin was reasonably good compared with commercial phytohemagglutinin (extracted from Phaseolus vulgaris) Mitogenic properties of the lectin were enhanced when four Chinese herbal polysaccharides were applied concurrently, among which 50 μg/mL Astragalus mongholicus polysaccharides (APS) with 12.5 μg/mL red kidney bean lectin yielded the highest mitogenic activity and 100 mg/kg/bw APS with 12.5 mg/kg/bw red kidney bean lectin elevated mouse nonspecific immunity.
Reversed micelles were used to extract lectin from red kidney beans and factors affecting reverse micellar systems (pH value, ionic strength and extraction time) were studied. The optimal conditions were extraction at pH 4-6, back extraction at pH 9-11, ion strength at 0.15 M NaCl, extraction for 4-6 minutes and back extraction for 8 minutes. The reverse micellar system was compared with traditional extraction methods and demonstrated to be a time-saving method for the extraction of red kidney beanlectin. Mitogenic activity of the lectin was reasonably good compared with commercial phytohemagglutinin (extracted from Phaseolus vulgaris) Mitogenic properties of the lectin were enhanced when four Chinese herbal polysaccharides were applied concurrently, among which 50 μg/mL Astragalusmongholicus polysaccharides (APS) with 12.5 μg/mL red kidney beanlectin yielded the highest mitogenic activity and 100 mg/kg/bw APS with 12.5 mg/kg/bw red kidney beanlectin elevated mouse nonspecific immunity.
Lectins are carbohydrate-binding proteins, which are highly variable in their amino acid sequences, widely distributed in microorganisms, viruses, animals and higher plants [1], and with different functions, structures, tissue localizations and carbohydrate-binding specificities. Plant lectins were classified into seven families according to their evolutionary and structural characteristics by Van Damme et al. [2], one of which is the legume lectin family. Among the numerous lectins studied, those of the legumes occupy a special position, since they represent the largest and most thoroughly studied family of these proteins [3]. The leguminous seed lectins show a remarkable conservation in primary, secondary, and tertiary structures. Because of the very similar tertiary structures and varied quaternary structures [4], legume lectins have become an excellent model to analyze the role of primary structure in determining the modes of quaternary association. A number of diverse physiological roles have been proposed for these proteins, including mitogenic [5, 6], antifungal [7], antiviral [8, 9], anti-insect [10, 11], and antitumor [6, 12–15] activities. Their sugar-binding properties are also used as molecular tools to study glycoconjugates or for drug delivery and targeting [16, 17].There are many problems to overcome during preparation of lectins, such as a low extraction rate, purification difficulties, and high extraction cost, which restricts the application of lectins.Lectin extraction is usually achieved using different methods of diffusion in aqueous solution and ammonium sulfate precipitation. Problems with these methods include cumbersome operations, a low extraction rate, hard to extract hand-running and amplify, which universally exist in the separation and purification of biomolecules. To solve these problems, alternative techniques have received particular attention, such as liquid-liquid extraction with reversed micelles. In this paper, reversed micelles were used and compared with traditional methods for the extraction of red kidney beanlectin.Polysaccharides isolated from a variety of traditional medicinal plants can greatly stimulate immune system in vivo and in vitro, therefore, they have the potential to be immunomodulators with wide applications [18-20]. Most polysaccharides derived from traditional medicinal plants are relatively nontoxic and do not cause significant side effects, which are major problems associated with immunomodulatory bacterial polysaccharides and synthetic compounds. Thus, plant polysaccharides are ideal candidates for therapeutics [18] and three polysaccharides (lentinan, schizophyllan and krestin) were accepted as immunoceuticals in several Oriental countries in 2002 [19]. In this work, mitogenic activity of red kidney beanlectin and four Chinese herbal polysaccharides (CHPs) were applied together to detect if the immunomodulatory activities were enhanced.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Materials
Red kidney beans were purchased from a local supermarket in Heilongjiang Province, China. Chinese herbal medicines were obtained from Siyitang Company (Harbin, China). 3-(4,5-Dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) and electrophoretic reagents were purchased from Sigma (Sigma Aldrich China). DEAE Sephadex A-50 and Sephadex G-150 were obtained from GE Healthcare (USA). Other reagents of the highest purity available were obtained from local suppliers. Six- to eight-week-old female Kunming mice, each weighing approximately 20 g, were obtained from the laboratory animal center in the 2nd affiliated hospital of Harbin Medicine University. Standard mouse chow and drinking water solutions were fed ad libitum.
2.2. Isolation of Red Kidney Bean Lectin
2.2.1. Traditional Methods
(1) Soaking Method
Red kidney beans were ground to a powder in an electric mill and filtered through 80 mesh grit. The powder (5 g) was mixed with 0.15 M NaCl (1:8, w/v) for 48 h at 4°C, and filtered through 80 mesh grid. Subsequently, the filtrate was centrifuged at 9168 ×g for 30 minutes, and the supernatant was fractionally precipitated with ammonium sulfate at 40%, 50%, 60%, and 70% saturation, respectively. The four pellets were combined, dissolved in a minimal volume of water, and dialyzed against distilled water at 4°C.
(2) Degreasing Method
The powder was defatted twice with Sherwood oil (1: 8, w/v) for 4 h at 4°C, which was removed by volatilization at room temperature, to obtain degreased bean powder. The degreased bean powder was mixed with 0.15 M NaCl (1:8, w/v) for 48 h at 4 °C, and subsequent procedures were identical to those described in Section 2.2.1.(1).
(3) Homogenate Method
Red kidney beans (5 g) were softened in 400 mL NaCl (1:8, w/v) for 24 hours at 4°C, then homogenized in a blender. The homogenate was diffused for a further 24 hours at 4°C, then filtered through an 80 mesh grid. The filtrate was centrifuged at 9168 × g for 30 minutes, and the supernatant was precipitated hierarchically by ammonium sulfate.To evaluate the protein concentration and hemagglutinating activity of each extract, all extracts were adjusted to the same volume using polyethylene glycol 20000 when necessary.
2.2.2. Reversed Micelle Extraction
The reverse micellar system comprised sodium di-(2-ethylhexyl) sulfosuccinate (AOT) in isooctane. Extraction and back extraction assays were performed by phase contact 1:1 (v/v), stirred for 5 minutes and separated by centrifugation at 2292 × g for 5 minutes following the method of Nascimento et al. [20].Single factor analysis was used to assess the effects of aqueous phase pH, extraction time and aqueous phase ion strength on reversed micelle extraction.
2.3. Determination of Protein Concentration
Bradford's method [21] was used for protein quantification, using bovine serum albumin (BSA) as the standard. The relative protein concentration of the eluted fractions was determined by measuring the absorbance at 280 nm.
2.4. Hemagglutinating Activity Assay
Serial two-fold dilutions of the lectin solution in microtiter v-plates (25 μL) was mixed with 25 μL 2% chicken red blood cell suspension in saline (pH 7.2). Readings were recorded after about 30 minutes at room temperature, when the blank had fully sedimented. The hemagglutination titer, defined as the reciprocal of the highest dilution exhibiting hemagglutination, was treated as one hemagglutination unit. Specific activity was expressed as the number of hemagglutination units per mg protein.
2.5. Purification of Red Kidney Bean Lectin
Crude extract from reversed micelles was dialyzed against 0.1 M NaCl in 0.02 M Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), loaded on a DEAE Sephadex A-50 column (2.6 cm × 60 cm) that had been equilibrated with the same buffer, and subjected to ion exchange chromatography. The column was washed initially with 0.1 M NaCl in 0.02 M Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) to remove proteins that had not specifically absorbed to the column, then washed with linear salt gradient elution. Fractions showing hemagglutinating activity were further purified by sieve chromatography on a Sephadex G150 column in 0.15 M NaCl in 0.02 M Tris-HCl (pH 8.0).
2.6. SDS-PAGE
Sodium dodecyl sulfatepolyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) was performed in accordance with the method of Laemmli et al. [22], using a 15% separating and a 5% stacking gel.
2.7. Extraction and Purification of Chinese Herbal Polysaccharides (CHPs)
Powders ground from four Chinese medicinal materials (Astragalus mongholicus, Poria cocos, indigowood root (Isatis indigotica), and Angelica sinensis) were boiled in distilled water for 4 hours at 100°C. After filtration to remove debris, the filtrates were concentrated in a rotary evaporator. Proteins were removed using the Sevag method [23]. Crude polysaccharide fractions were obtained by precipitation with three volumes of ethanol and desiccation in vacuo. The precipitates were redissolved in distilled water and loaded on a D101 macroporous resin column (2.6 cm × 60 cm) to remove pigments. The effluents were collected and polysaccharide fractions were quantitatively determined using a phenol-sulfuric acid assay [24] with glucose as the reference standard.
2.8. Assay of Mitogenic Activity of the Lectin and Four CHPs
Three Kunming mice (20–25 g) were killed by cervical dislocation. The spleens were aseptically removed and pressed through a sterilized 100-mesh stainless steel sieve. Splenic lymphocytes were separated with lymphocyte separation medium and resuspended to a concentration of 2 × 106 cells/mL in RPMI 1640 culture medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, 100 units/mL penicillin and 100 μg/mL streptomycin. The suspensions (2 × 106 cells/90 μL/well) were seeded to a 96-well culture plate, and serial two-fold dilutions of red kidney beanlectin solution (0.78–200 μg/mL) or CHPs solution (25–400 μg/mL) in 10 μL medium were added. After incubation for 48 hours at 37°C in humidified atmosphere containing 5% CO2, 10 μL 0.5 mg/mL MTT was added, and the cells were incubated for another 4 hours under the same conditions. Finally, 100 μL dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) was added to each well, oscillated for 1 minute, and the absorbance was measured at 570 nm. The results were expressed as OD values.According to the mitogenic activity of red kidney beanlectin, an optimal lectin concentration (12.5 μg/mL) was chosen to be applied concurrently with the four CHPs at different concentrations (0-400 μ g/mL) to detect whether mitogenic activity was enhanced.
2.9. Effect of Red Kidney Bean Lectin and Astragalus mongholicus Polysaccharide on Mouse Immune Functions
Sixty Kunming mice (20–25 g) were randomly divided into six groups, consisting of a saline control group, APS (Astragalus mongholicuspolysaccharide) group, lectin group, and lectin together with high, moderate, or low APS dosage group. The mice were maintained in an air-conditioned animal room with an ambient temperature of 21°C, 55% relative humidity, and 12 h/12 h light/dark cycle. The animals were provided ad libitum with a basal diet (Institute of Laboratory Animal Science, ingredients: protein ≥18%, fat ≥4%, fiber ≤5%, lysine ≥0.82%, calcium 1.0–1.8%, phosphorus 0.6–1.2%, and salt 0.3–0.8%) and regularly refreshed tap water. The mice were injected intraperitoneally with 0.5 mL polysaccharide solution once per day for 5 days. The lectin and high, moderate, or low APS dosage group received 12.5 mg/kg/bw lectin and either 100, 50, or 25 mg/kg/bw APS, respectively; the APS group was given 100 mg/kg/bw APS; the lectin group received 12.5 mg/kg/bw red kidney beanlectin; and 0.5 mL saline was injected in the control group. On the seventh day a carbon particle clearance experiment was carried out, according to Zhang [25], and the spleen index and thymus index were measured. Briefly, 0.05 mL/10 g/bw India ink was injected into each mouse through the vena caudalis, then 20 μL blood was obtained from the vena orbitalis posterior 3 and 7 minutes after the injection. The blood samples were placed in tubes with 2 mL 0.1% Na2CO3, and OD values were measured at 600 nm.The clearance index (K), phagocytic index (α) and immune organ index were calculated as follows, t2 and t1 means 7 minutes and 3 minutes respectively.
3. Results
3.1. Effects of pH, Extraction Time, and Ion Strength on Reversed Micelle Extraction
The pH value of the aqueous phase affected both extraction and back extraction greatly. The extraction was optimal when the aqueous phase pH was 4–6, and for back extraction, the optimal pH was 9 to 11 (Figure 1(a)). Extraction time also affected reversed micelle extraction. The highest lectin concentration was obtained with an extraction time of 4–6 minutes, beyond which the extraction rate decreased greatly, while the back extraction rate increased as the extraction time increased, but did not increase any further after 8 minutes extraction (Figure 1(b)). The ion strength of the aqueous phase had a major influence on reversed micelle extraction. At 0.05 M NaCl the aqueous and organic phases could not be detached, at 0.10 M NaCl detachment was incomplete, at 0.15 M NaCl complete detachment occurred and according to the curve the extraction effect was the best.
Figure 1
Effect of pH (a), extraction time (b), and ion strength (c) on reversed micelle extraction of red kidney bean lectin. Data represent means ± SD (n = 6).
3.2. Extraction Effect
The regression equation of the BSA standard curve was y = 0.6476x−0.0023 (R2 = 0.9992) and the linear range was 0.2–1.0 mg/mL. The protein concentration of each extract was calculated based on the regression equation, and results showed that the reversed micelle extraction rate of degreased or undegreased ground bean was 7.23% and 6.25%, while those of traditional extraction methods were 4.27%, 5.49%, and 3.04%, respectively (Table 1). Mean specific hemagglutinating activity of extracts obtained with the soak, degreasing, and homogenizing methods was 60, 187, and 84 titer/mg, respectively, whereas that of extracts obtained from degreased and undegreased red kidney bean powder with reversed micelles was 283 and 164 titer/mg, respectively (Table 1).
Table 1
Protein concentration and hemagglutinating activity of each extract. Data represent means ± SD (n = 4).
Parameter
Traditional method
Reversed micelle extraction
Soak
Degreasing
Homogenizing
Degreased
Undegreased
Total protein (mg)
213.39 ± 21.34
274.51 ± 15.23
152.22 ± 13.03
361.52 ± 19.89
312.54 ± 17.84
Extraction rate (%)
4.27%
5.49%
3.04%
7.23%
6.25%
Specific activity (titer/mg)
60
187
84
283
164
Total activity (titer ×104)
1.28
5.12
1.28
10.23
5.13
3.3. Purification of Red Kidney Bean Lectin
Three fractions were obtained from ion exchange chromatography (Figure 2 (a)), among which fraction I did not show hemagglutinating activity, and the volume obtained from fraction III was too small, so only fraction II was collected, concentrated and loaded on a Sephadex G-150 column for gel filtration. Fraction II was resolved into a large fraction (fraction IV) and a very small fraction (fraction V) (Figure 2 (b)). Both fractions showed hemagglutinating activity, but only fraction IV was collected and dialyzed, then stored at −20°C. The purified lectin (fraction IV in Figure 2 (b)) formed a single band with a molecular mass of about 30 kDa in SDS-PAGE electrophoresis (Figure 3), which confirmed the effectiveness of the purification method used.
Figure 2
(a) Fractionation of the crude extract of red kidney bean lectin by DEAE Sephadex A-50 ion-exchange chromatography equilibrated with 0.1 M NaCl in 0.02 M Tris-HCl (pH 8.0). The column was washed initially with the same buffer to remove proteins that were not specifically absorbed to the column (data not shown on the figure) then washed with buffer in which the NaCl concentration increased linearly from 0.1 M to 1.0 M. Three peaks were obtained, among which peaks II and III exhibited hemagglutinating activity. Column: 2.6 cm × 60 cm; flow rate: 0.5 mL/min. (b) Fractionation of peak II on a Sephadex G-150 column with 0.15 M NaCl in 0.02 M Tris-HCl (pH 8.0). Column: 2.6 cm × 60 cm; flow rate: 1 mL/min. Only the major peak (peak IV) exhibited hemagglutinating activity. Data represent means ± SD (n = 6).
Figure 3
SDS-PAGE electrophoresis of red kidney bean lectin. Lane 1: purified red kidney bean lectin. Lane 2: crude red kidney bean lectin. Lane 3: molecular mass standards. From top downwards: β-galactosidase (116.0 kDa), bovine serum albumin (66.2 kDa), ovalbumin (45.0 kDa), lactate dehydrogenase (35.0 kDa), REase Bsp981 (25.0 kDa), β-lactoglobulin (18.4 kDa), and lysozyme (14.4 kDa).
3.4. Extraction of Chinese Herbal Polysaccharides
The regression equation of the glucose standard curve was y = 0.0509x − 0.0149 (R2 = 0.9915) and the linear range was 2–10 μg/mL. Based on the standard curve, 3.65 g APS, 1.22 g PWP (Poria cocospolysaccharide), 3.214 g IRP (indigowood root polysaccharide), and 3.55 g ASP (Angelica sinensispolysaccharide) were extracted from 300 g Astragalus mongholicus, 200 g Poria cocos, 300 g indigowood root, and 300 g Angelica sinensis, respectively, and the carbohydrate concentration of each was 86%, 79%, 72%, and 83%, respectively (Table 2).
Table 2
Extraction of polysaccharides from four Chinese medicinal materials. Data represent means ± SD (n = 3).
Red kidney beanlectin significantly promoted proliferation of murine splenic lymphocytes at a final concentration of 6.25–200 μg/mL (Figure 4 (a)). The four CHPs all showed mitogenic activity when applied alone, and their mitogenic activities were enhanced when applied concurrently with red kidney beanlectin, among which 50 μg/mL APS with 12.5 μg/mL red kidney beanlectin showed the highest mitogenic activity (Figure 4 (b)).
Figure 4
(a) Effect of red kidney bean lectin on multiplication of mouse splenic lymphocytes (OD570 va1ue). (b) Influence of CHPs applied separately, and concurrent application of CHPs with 12.5 μg/mL red kidney bean lectin, on multiplication of mouse splenic lymphocytes (OD570 va1ue). CHP: Chinese herbal polysaccharide; APS: Astragalus mongholicus polysaccharide; PWP: Poria cocos polysaccharide; ASP: Angelica sinensis polysaccharide; IRP: indigowoad root polysaccharide. Data represent means ± SD (n = 3). Data were analyzed by one-way analysis of variance. *P < .05, **P < .01, compared with CHP applied alone.
3.6. Effects of Concurrent Application of APS and Red Kidney Bean Lectin on Mouse Immune Function
Immune organ indices were calculated to evaluate the effects of APS and red kidney beanlectin on mouse immune functions. It was found that 100 mg/kg/bw APS with 12.5 mg/kg/bw red kidney beanlectin increased the mouse spleen index, but there were no significant differences in the thymus index between the treated groups and control groups (Table 3). The APS group and concurrent application of APS with moderate and high doses of red kidney beanlectin increased the phagocytosis activity of macrophages.
Table 3
Effects of concurrent application of APS and red kidney bean lectin on the spleen and thymus indices and phagocytosis of MΦ of mouse. Data represent means ± SD (n = 10).
group
Spleen index(mg/g/bw)
Thymus index(mg/g/bw)
Phagocyticindex α of MΦ
Control
4.71 ± 0.65
2.06 ± 0.45
4.06 ± 0.82
Lectin control
4.75 ± 0.90
2.06 ± 0.53
4.47 ± 1.11
APS
5.00 ± 0.80
2.15 ± 0.61
5.33 ± 1.42*
Low dose
4.85 ± 0.65
2.19 ± 0.81
4.69 ± 0.93
Middle dose
5.46 ± 0.85*
2.09 ± 0.43
5.42 ± 0.90**
High dose
6.50 ± 1.04**
2.28 ± 0.65
5.81 ± 1.38**
APS: Astragalus Polysaccharides
Control: normal saline; Lectin group: 12.5 mg/kg/bw red kidney bean lectin; APS group: 100 mg/kg/bw APS; Low dose group: 12.5 mg/kg/bw lectin + 25 mg/kg/bw APS; Moderate dose group: 12.5 mg/kg/bw lectin + 50 mg/kg/bw APS; High dose group: 12.5 mg/kg/bw lectin + 100 mg/kg/bw APS. Data were analyzed by one-way analysis of variance. * P < .05, **P < .01, compared with the control group.
4. Discussion
4.1. Extraction of Red Kidney Bean Lectin
Lectins possess many bioactivities that may have important practical applications, but the high price resulting from the low extraction rate restricts practical application of lectins. In this study a novel method, reversed micelles, was used to extract red kidney bean lectins. Reversed micelles represent water microdrops dispersed in an apolar aprotic solvent (oil). The interface between the water and apolar liquid is stabilized by a monolayer of surfactant molecules, the polar heads of which are in contact with the aqueous phase, whereas the hydrocarbon radicals are directed inside the oil phase. Reverse micellar systems have been utilized for extraction and purification of proteins since the 1990s [26, 27]. Nascimento et al. [20] used reverse micelles to extract affinity-purified lectin from Cratylia mollis seeds, of which the extraction and back extraction rate were both 100%. In the present study, the utility of AOT/isooctane reversed micelles for lectin extraction was evaluated. The optimal conditions were found to be extraction at pH 4–6 and back extraction at pH 9–11, an aqueous phase ionic strength of 0.15 M NaCl, extraction for 4–6 minutes and back extraction for 8 minutes. Extraction and back extraction of reversed micelles is very fast and both completed in a few minutes. Compared to the tedious operations of traditional extraction methods, reversed micelles were shown to have much greater efficiency. The efficacy of degreasing with both traditional methods and reversed micelles was investigated, and degreasing was demonstrated to be conducive to the separation of red kidney beanlectin. Reversed micelles resulted in a higher extraction rate and higher hemagglutinating activity than the three traditional methods, and the protein extraction rate from degreased bean powder with reversed micelles was 31.60% higher than that with the degreasing method (the best of the three traditional methods). The total hemagglutinating activity of reversed micelles was 99.80% higher than that of the degreasing method (10.23 × 104 and 5.12 × 104, resp.). Therefore, reversed micelles were considered to be a superior method to extract lectins.
4.2. Purification of Red Kidney Bean Lectin by Column Chromatography
Methods for purifying lectins differ from one to another according to the source of the lectins, but classical protein purification methods, such as salting out and different chromatographic methods [6, 28, 29], are still the basic methods used to purify lectins. In this study the purification procedure involved ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE Sephadex A-50 and sieve chromatography on Sephadex G150 columns. The purified lectin represented by fraction IV appeared as a single band with a molecular mass of 30 kDa in SDS-PAGE, which demonstrated that the purification strategies were effective.
4.3. Mitogenic Activity of Red Kidney Bean Lectin and Four CHPs
Mitogenic activity has been identified in many leguminous species, such as knife beans [30] and anasazi beans [6]. Phytohemagglutinin (PHA; lectin extracted from Phaseolus vulgaris) and concanavalin A (ConA; lectin extracted from Canavalia gladiata) are the two main mitogens used in cell proliferation experiments in vitro. Concentrations of PHA used in cell proliferation assays in vitro differ according to the kidney bean cultivar and breeding location, the purpose and method of the assay, and source of PHA; the ultimate concentration of PHA obtained from Sigma has varied from 0.04 μg/mL [31] to 1 μg/mL [32], 5 μg/mL [33, 34], 10 μg/mL [35-38], 14 μg/mL [39], 20 μg/mL [40], and 25 μg/mL [41], and that from Shanghai Yihua [42] and Tianjin Guangfu [43] is 10 μg/mL. This article demonstrated that red kidney beanlectin can notably stimulate splenic lymphocyte proliferation at concentrations from 6.5 to 200 μg/mL. Thus, compared with commercial PHA, this lectin has potential practical applications as a mitogen.Astragalus mongholicus, Poria cocos, Poria cocos, indigowood root and Angelica sinensis are four well-known traditional East Asian medicinal plants, polysaccharides of which are important ingredients with many beneficial functions [44-46]. A lot of CHPs have mitogenic activity, such as Astragaluspolysaccharide, IRP and Chinese yampolysaccharide [45, 47]. Mitogenic activities of polysaccharides from these four plants were studied in the presence or absence of red kidney beanlectin. All four polysaccharides were shown to possess mitogenic activity, and the activity was enhanced when the CHPs were applied concurrently with red kidney beanlectin, among which joint application of APS with red kidney beanlectin exhibited the strongest mitogenic activity. Herbal polysaccharides exert immunoregulatory effects by different and complex mechanisms, including modulating the Th1/Th2 ratio, phagocytosis activity of macrophages, of NK cell activity and secretion of cytokines. Mitogenic activities of polysaccharides have been studied for decades, but the mechanisms are still unclear. In this study the mitogenic activities of APS, IRP, and PWP were suppressed at a high concentration, which has been reported in previous studies [48, 49]. Reasons for this phenomenon might be the proliferation of Ts cells or presence of cytotoxic contaminants in the polysaccharides.
4.4. Influence of Red Kidney Bean Lectin and APS on Mouse Immune Function
Macrophages are an important component of host defenses against viral infection by inhibiting intracellular replication of viruses and by killing virus-infected cells [50]. When activated, a variety of oxygen or nitrogen intermediates and cytokines are released from macrophages and participate in various important biological functions, such as anti-inflammatory and anti-tumor activities [44, 51, 52]. Therefore, phagocytic activity of macrophages is an important indicator of organism immune functions. Many herbal polysaccharides can enhance phagocytic activity of macrophages [44, 53, 54]. In this study APS augmented the phagocytic activity of macrophages, which increased 9.07% when APS and red kidney beanlectin were applied concurrently. Joint application of APS and red kidney beanlectin also increased the spleen index, whereas application of APS and red kidney beanlectin alone did not. Thus, enhancements in effects were apparent when herbal polysaccharides were applied concurrently with red kidney beanlectin, which is a very important finding considering the high cost and time-consuming nature of the extraction procedures.