| Literature DB >> 25067942 |
Kam Lok Wong1, Ricky Ngok Shun Wong2, Liang Zhang1, Wing Keung Liu3, Tzi Bun Ng3, Pang Chui Shaw4, Philip Chi Lip Kwok5, Yau Ming Lai6, Zhang Jin Zhang1, Yanbo Zhang1, Yao Tong1, Ho-Pan Cheung1, Jia Lu1, Stephen Cho Wing Sze1.
Abstract
Some protein pharmaceuticals from Chinese medicine have been developed to treat cardiovascular diseases, genetic diseases, and cancer. Bioactive proteins with various pharmacological properties have been successfully isolated from animals such as Hirudo medicinalis (medicinal leech), Eisenia fetida (earthworm), and Mesobuthus martensii (Chinese scorpion), and from herbal medicines derived from species such as Cordyceps militaris, Ganoderma, Momordica cochinchinensis, Viscum album, Poria cocos, Senna obtusifolia, Panax notoginseng, Smilax glabra, Ginkgo biloba, Dioscorea batatas, and Trichosanthes kirilowii. This article reviews the isolation methods, molecular characteristics, bioactivities, pharmacological properties, and potential uses of bioactive proteins originating from these Chinese medicines.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25067942 PMCID: PMC4110622 DOI: 10.1186/1749-8546-9-19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chin Med ISSN: 1749-8546 Impact factor: 5.455
Bioactive proteins isolated from Chinese medicine and their reported pharmacological effects
| Hirudin | Anti-coagulation activity through inhibition of thrombin activity [ | |
| Anti-proliferative activity toward human ovarian and tongues squamous cancer cells [ | ||
| Earthworm fibrinolytic enzyme | Anti-cancer activity against hepatoma | |
| Anti-epilepsy protein (8.3 kDa) | Anti-epilepsy activity in mice | |
| Lectin designated as CML (31 kDa) | Haemagglutinating activity in mouse and rat erythrocytes | |
| Mitogenic activity on mouse splenocytes [ | ||
| Cordymin (10.9 kDa) | Anti-fungal activity through inhibition of mycelial growth | |
| Inhibitory effect on HIV-1 reverse transcriptase | ||
| Anti-cancer activity against MCF-7 breast cancer cells | ||
| | Protease designated CMP (12 kDa) | Anti-fungal activity |
| Anti-cancer activity against MCF-7 breast cancer cells and bladder cancer 5637 cells | ||
| Ling Zhi-8 (12.4 kDa protein) | Immuno-modulatory activity through inducing maturation of human monocyte-derived dendritic cells and stimulating IL2 and IFN-γ secretion from CD4+ and CD8+ T cells [ | |
| Anti-cancer activity against lung carcinoma cell growth | ||
| Lectin (a 18-kDa protein) | Haemagglutinating activity and mitogenic activity towards BALB/c mouse splenocytes [ | |
| Anti-cancer activity against leukemia (L1210 and M1) cells and hepatoma (HepG2) cells [ | ||
| Immunomodulatory activity through activating mouse peritoneal macrophages (RAW 264.7) [ | ||
| Cyclotides | Anti-cancer activity against human cancer cells U251, MDA-MB-231, A549, DU145 and BEL-7402 | |
| Cochinin B (28 kDa ribosome inactivating protein) | Anti-cancer activity against human cervical epithelial carcinoma (HeLa), human embryonic kidney (HEK293) and human small cell lung cancer (NCI-H187) cell lines | |
| MCoCC-1 (a 33 amino acid long peptide) | Anti-cancer activity against human melanoma cell line (MM96L) | |
| Chymotrypsin inhibitor designated as MCoCI (7.5 kDa) | Anti-oxidative activity through activation of glutathione-S-transferase and superoxide dismutase | |
| Immunomodulatory activity through stimulating the proliferation of mouse splenocytes, splenic lymphocytes, bone marrow cells and macrophages | ||
| Lectin designated as CM-1 (55 kDa) | Anti-cancer activity against CLY colon cancer cells and HT-29 colorectal cancer cells | |
| | Lectin designated as ACML-55 | Immunomodulatory activity through enhancing both antigen specific activation and proliferation of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells as well as number of tumor antigen specific CD8+ T cells [ |
| The seeds of | Novel protein (19.7 kDa) | Inhibitory effect on cholesterol biosynthesis in Chinese hamster oocytes |
| Antiviral activity against human syncytial virus (RSV), influenza A and influenza B viruses [ | ||
| Immunopotentiating activity through inducing gene expression of IL-1βand TNF-α in splenocytes and macrophages | ||
| Smilaxin (30 kDa) | Immuno-stimulating activity | |
| Anti-cancer activity against MBL2 and PU5 cells | ||
| Inhibitory effect on HIV-1 reverse transcriptase | ||
| Ginkbilobin (13 kDa) | Anti-fungal activity against | |
| Antibacterial activity against | ||
| Inhibitory effect on HIV-1 reverse transcriptase [ | ||
| Immuno-modulatory activity through inhibiting proliferation of murine splenocytes [ | ||
| Dioscorin (32 kDa) | Carbonic anhydrase activities [ | |
| Trypsin inhibitory activities [ | ||
| Potential airway protective effects on A549 human airway epithelium cells [ | ||
| Anti-oxidant properties reflected from DPPH and hydroxyl radicals scavenging effects [ | ||
| Immuno-modulatory activity | ||
| Trichosanthin (247 amino acid long peptide) | Anti-HIV activity through inhibition of serum HIV-1 p24 antigen levels and increase CD4+ T cell count in HIV-1 infected patients [ | |
| Antiviral activity against hepatitis B virus [ | ||
Figure 1Molecules and interactions of hirudin. H, chain H of human thrombin; I, hirudin variant-1; L, chain L of Human thrombin. 1, Napsagatran.
Figure 2Molecules and interactions of fibrinolytic enzyme. (A), fibrinotic enzyme component A; (B), fibrinotic enzyme component B; A, chain A of fibrinotic enzyme component B; B, chain B of fibrinotic enzyme component B; 1, N-Acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminylamine; 2, alpha-L-Fucose; 3, Mg2+; 4, sulfate ion and alpha-D-mannose.
Figure 3Alignment of anti-epilepsy peptide conserved domain in Conserved Domain Database (CDD) of NCBI. The entry used for query was gi|9886761|gb|AAG01571.1|. Aligned residues are in upper case, unaligned residues in lower case, and gaps are displayed as dashes. Red letters indicate highly conserved residues and blue letters indicates less conserved residues Unaligned (lower case) residues are displayed in grey.
Figure 4Crystal structure of LZ-8.A, Chain A of LZ-8; B, Chain B of LZ-8.
Figure 5Crystal structure of cyclotides from viola tricolor.
Figure 6Crystal structure of MCoCC-1 from momordica cochinchinensis.
Figure 7Crystal structure of Ginkbilobin-2 of Ginkgo biloba seeds.
Figure 8Crystal structure of the complex of trichosanthin of Trichosanthes kirilowii with adenine. A stands for chain of trichosanthin; 1 represents adenine.