| Literature DB >> 31878316 |
Subrat Kumar Bhattamisra1, Kah Heng Yap2, Vikram Rao2, Hira Choudhury3.
Abstract
Catalpol, an iridoid glucoside, is widely distributed in many plant families and is primarily obtained from the root of Rehmannia glutinosa Libosch. Rehmannia glutinosa is a plant very commonly used in Chinese and Korean traditional medicine for various disorders, including diabetes mellitus, neuronal disorders, and inflammation. Catalpol has been studied extensively for its biological properties both in vitro and in vivo. This review aims to appraise the biological effects of catalpol and their underlying mechanisms. An extensive literature search was conducted using the keyword "Catalpol" in the public domains of Google scholar, PubMed, and Scifinder. Catalpol exhibits anti-diabetic, cardiovascular protective, neuroprotective, anticancer, hepatoprotective, anti-inflammatory, and anti-oxidant effects in experimental studies. Anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties are mostly related for its biological effect. However, some specific mechanisms are also elucidated. Elevated serotonin and BDNF level by catalpol significantly protect against depression and neurodegeneration. Catalpol demonstrated an increased mitochondrial biogenesis and activation of PI3K/Akt pathway for insulin sensitizing effect. Further, its cardiovascular protective effect was linked to PI3K/Akt, apelin/APJ and Jak-Stat pathway. Catalpol produced a significant reduction in cell proliferation and an increase in apoptosis in different cancer conditions. Overall, catalpol demonstrated multiple biological effects due to its numerous mechanisms including anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects.Entities:
Keywords: Catalpol; anti-inflammation; anticancer; antidiabetic; antioxidant; cardiovascular protection; neuroprotection
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31878316 PMCID: PMC7023090 DOI: 10.3390/biom10010032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Figure 1Chemical structure of catalpol.
Effect of catalpol in experimental models of inflammation and oxidative stress.
| Experimental Model | Dose and Duration | Key Findings of Catalpol | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Human aorta endothelial cells | Catalpol: 7.5, 15, or 30 µM for 24 h |
Suppressed LDH secretion, MDA levels and the reduction in GSH Inhibited NF-κB activity and overproduction of ROS via the inhibition of Nox4 expression and endoplasmic reticulum stress Enhanced Bcl-2 and reduced Bax, Caspase-3, and Caspase-9 protein expression | [ |
| BALB/c mice | Catalpol: 2.5, 5, or 10 mg/kg |
Reduced levels of IL-6, IL-4, IL-1β, and TNF- α Up-regulated IL-10 expression Inhibited activation of NF-κB and MAPK signaling pathways | [ |
| BALB/c mice | Catalpol: 5, or 10 mg/kg for 2 weeks |
Inhibited ovalbumin-induced inflammation and IgE secretion in the lung as shown by decreases in IL-4 and IL-5 levels Inhibited aberrant eosinophil infiltration in the lungs and prevented the increase of eosinophil chemokine eotaxin and its receptor, CCR3 | [ |
| Ovalbumin induced asthma in BALB/c mice | 5 mg/kg, i.p. |
Significant decrease in inflammatory cells, eosinophil, IgE level in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid Marked reduction in IL-1, IL-4, and elevation in INF-γ in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. Significant reduction in TLR-4 gene and protein expression in serum | [ |
| Human THP-1 monocyte and A549 cell | Catalpol: 5, 10, 20, or 50 µM for 24 h |
Reduced IL-1β and TNF- α levels Suppressed the activation of the downstream extracellular signal-reduced kinase and NF-κB inflammatory pathway | [ |
| Human aorta epithelial cells | Catalpol: 10, 20, or 40 µM for 24 h |
Inhibited oxidative stress and induced autophagy via activation of AMPK signaling pathway Increased SOD and suppressed Nox4 activity | [ |
| Rat pheochromocytoma cells | Catalpol: 0.001, 0.01, 0.1, or 1 mM for 24 h |
Suppressed the down-regulation of Bcl-2, up-regulation of Bax and release of mitochondrial cytochrome c to cytosol Alleviated Caspase-3 activation, PARP cleavage | [ |
Effect of catalpol in experimental models of neurological disorders.
| Experimental Model | Dose and Duration | Key Findings of Catalpol | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kunming mice | Catalpol: 5, 10, or 20 mg/kg, p.o., for 2 weeks |
Reduced duration of immobility during tail suspension test and forced swim test Counteracted decrease in rectal temperature, akinesia and eyelid ptosis induced by reserpine Increased concentration of serotonin and its metabolite, 5-HIAA in brains of mice Significant antidepressant effect | [ |
| Sprague-Dawley rats | Catalpol: 5, 10, or 20 mg/kg, for 5 weeks |
Alleviated depressive-like behavior Decreased serum corticosterone levels Increased BDNF activity, mRNA expression of BDNF and TrkB Down-regulated mRNA expression of COX-2 PGE2 in the hippocampus and frontal cortex Improved cognitive ability | [ |
| Kunming mice | Catalpol: 1, 3, or 9 mg/kg, for 3 days |
Induced neurological function recovery Enhanced spontaneous mobility and antidepressant effect Increased levels of ACh, ChAT, and BDNF in the hippocampus Neuroprotective effect against Alzheimer’s condition | [ |
| CD-1 mice | Catalpol: 50 mg/kg, for 60 days |
Improved memory deficits in neurodegenerative mice Elevated levels of muscarinic receptors, ChAT and BDNF in the brain of mice | [ |
| Sprague-Dawley rats | Catalpol: 5 mg/kg, for 10 days |
Increase in levels of GAP-43 and synaptophysin in the hippocampus Synaptophysin in the dentate granule layer of the hippocampus was increased Increase in protein kinase-C and BDNF in the hippocampus Increase in presynaptic proteins and up-regulation of relative signaling molecules indicates amelioration of neuroplasticity loss | [ |
| Swedish mutant APP overexpressed N2a cells | Catalpol: 200 or 400 µ m for 18 h |
Reduction in production of Aβ via non amyloidogenic APP pathway (enhanced expression of α-secretase, ADAM10) | [ |
|
C57BL/6 mice Ventral mesencephalons | Catalpol: 50 mg/kg, for 8 weeks |
Improved locomotor ability Elevated striatal dopamine levels Increased GDNF mRNA expression Protected the mesencephalic neurons from neurite shortening | [ |
| Mesencephalic neurons | Catalpol: 0.05, 0.1, or 0.5 mM for 30 min |
Increased neuron viability and reduced death of dopaminergic neurons Attenuated the loss of mitochondrial membrane potential Increase activity of antioxidant enzymes, glutathione peroxidase and superoxide dismutase Improved Parkinson’s disease condition | [ |
Figure 2Molecular changes by catalpol for the protection of brain, heart, and blood vessels.
Effect of catalpol in experimental models of diabetes mellitus and diabetes complications.
| Experimental Model | Dose and Duration | Key Findings of Catalpol | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rats (STZ, 65 mg/kg) | 0.1 mg/kg, i.v. injection, three days |
Catalpol enhanced β-endorphin release from the isolated adrenal medulla of STZ-diabetic rats. Marked reduction of PEPCK expression in liver and an increased expression of GLUT 4 in skeletal muscle. Plasma glucose lowering action of catalpol failed to produce in opioid μ-receptor knockout mice. Catalpol increased glucose utilization through increase of β-endorphin secretion from adrenal gland in STZ-diabetic rats | [ |
| Rats (STZ, 60 mg/kg) | 0.01–0.1 mg/kg, i.v. injection |
Significantly attenuated the increase of plasma glucose induced by an intravenous glucose challenge test in normal rats. Catalpol enhanced the uptake of radioactive glucose in the isolated soleus muscle of diabetic rat in a concentration-related manner Increase glycogen synthesis in liver of diabetic rats | [ |
| Male Sprague–Dawley rats (STZ, 65 mg/kg, i.p.) |
10, 50, and 100 mg/kg, intra-gastric infusion, |
Catalpol (50 and 100 mg/kg) showed significant and dose dependent reduction in blood glucose Significant improvement in CAT, SOD, and GSH-PX and attenuation of MDA in hippocampus was observed. NGF level in hippocampus was significantly and dose dependently increased with all the doses of catalpol. Neural density in CA1 region of hippocampus is significantly increased whereas, the density of TUNNEL positive cells was significantly decreased. Significantly improved the cognitive function of diabetic rats in Y-type maze | [ |
| STZ-induced diabetes rats with balloon-injured carotid |
Neointimal hyperplasia area was reduced in carotid arteries. Reduced levels of monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 in carotid arteries | [ | |
| Male C57BL/6 mice (STZ, 180 mg/kg) | 10 mg/kg/d, i.p. |
Reduction in 24 h urinary protein excretion, serum creatinine levels, and blood urea nitrogen. Significantly attenuated the elevated Grb10, caspase-3 expression in diabetic kidneys. Significantly higher in IGF-1 mRNA levels and IGF-1R phosphorylation (tyr1161) in the kidneys of catalpol-treated diabetic mice. Pathological severity and kidney fibrosis is significantly attenuated. Improved the diabetes-associated impaired renal functions and ameliorate pathological changes in diabetic kidneys | [ |
| C57BL/6 J male mice (HFD/STZ, 85 mg/kg, i.p.) | 50, 100, or 200 mg/kg, p.o.; |
Significant and dose dependent reduction of FBG, AUC for intraperitoneal glucose tolerance test (IPGTT-AUC). Catalpol (200 mg/kg) reduced TG (30%) and TC (45%). Skeletal muscle mitochondrial ATP content was significantly increased by approx 3.0 and 2.5 folds after the administration of 200 and 100 mg/kg catalpol. Mitochondrial membrane potential of isolated mitochondria in skeletal muscle was improved in a dose dependent manner after catalpol treatment. Significant and dose dependent increase in the mtDNA copy number in skeletal muscle. Catalpol (200 mg/kg) rescued muscle mitochondrial injury. PGC1α mRNA level was increased by 1.2 folds in the skeletal muscle of mice treated with catalpol (200 mg/kg) | [ |
| db/db mice | 200 mg/kg, p.o. |
Increased phosphorylation of IRS-1 and Akt, increased PI3K and GLUT4 levels in skeletal muscle. Increased insulin sensitivity and glucose Uptake in skeletal muscle Enhanced MyoD/MyoG-mediated myogenesis in skeletal muscle cells. No effect on insulin secretion | [ |
| C2C12 cells | 10, 30, or 100 μM | ||
| db/db mice | 40, 80, 160 mg/kg, p.o. |
Catalpol (80 and 160 mg/kg) significantly decreased the fasting blood glucose, glycated serum protein, total cholesterol and triglycerides concentrations Catalpol (80 and 160 mg/kg) exhibited a higher glucose tolerance and improve insulin resistance. Catalpol (80 and 160 mg/kg) significantly increased protein expression of p-AMPKα1/2 in liver, adipose tissue and skeletal muscle; GLUT-4 in skeletal muscle and adipose tissues; Catalpol (80 and 160 mg/kg) significantly decreased ACC and HMGCR mRNA expressions in liver It improved glucose tolerance, ameliorated insulin resistance, inhibits the triglyceride and cholesterol synthesis | [ |
| C57BL/6 J mice (HFD, 60% calorie with STZ, 40 mg/kg, for five consecutive days) | 100 and 200 mg/kg/d, p.o.; 4 weeks |
Increased GSK-3β phosphorylation at Ser9 and decreased GS phosphorylation at Ser641 in glucosamine-induced HepG2 cells and in the livers of HFD/STZ mice. Increased FOXO1 phosphorylation at Ser256 in glucosamine-induced HepG2cells, and inhibited PEPCK and G6pase expressions in glucosamine-induced HepG2 cells and in the livers of HFD/STZ mice. Decreased IRS-1 phosphorylation at Ser307in the livers of HFD/STZ mice, and increased Akt phosphorylation at Ser473 in glucosamine-induced HepG2 cells and in livers of HFD/STZ mice. Increased AMPK phosphorylation at Thr172 in glucosamine-induced HepG2 cells and in the livers of HFD/STZ mice. Reduced MDA level and increased GSH and SOD levels in the serum of HFD/STZ-induced mice and glucosamine-induced HepG2 cells. Reduced hepatic gluconeogenesis may ascribe to PI3K/Akt/FOXO1-mediated PEPCK and G6pase inhibition, and increased hepatic glycogen synthesis may attribute to PI3K/Akt/GSK3β mediated GS activation | [ |
| glucosamine-induced HepG2 cells | 20, 40, and 80 µM catalpol | ||
| C57BL/6 mice (HFD, 45% calorie) | 100 mg/kg, p.o. |
FBG levels, FPI levels, HOMA-IR, and AUC of OGTT were significantly reduced in the catalpol treated group. Reduction in adipose tissue inflammation, gene expression of the general macrophage marker F4/80 was markedly attenuated in epididymal adipose tissue. Pro-inflammatory genes such as TNF-α, IL-6, IL-1b, MCP-1, iNOS, and CD11c were markedly reduced by catalpol in adipose tissue. Anti-inflammatory genes such as arginase 1, Ym-1, IL-10, MGL1, Clec7a, and MMR were significantly increased by catalpol in adipose tissue. Significant decrease the phosphorylation of JNK and IKKβ, and decreased NF-kB p50 activation in adipose tissue | [ |
| Rats with initial high-fat and high-sugar diet (3 weeks), followed by STZ (30 mg/kg, i.p.) for 3 days | 5, 10, 20, or 50 mg/kg, i.v. 2 weeks |
Significant plasma glucose-lowering activities (65.8 ± 3.07%) at catalpol (50 mg/kg). Catalpol (50 mg/kg) showed significant attenuation of TC, TG and increase in HDL-C. Catalpol (50 mg/kg) significantly increased the SOD, GSH-PX, and CAT and reduced the MDA level in plasma. Catalpol reduced the damage to the pancreas in STZ-fat-diabetic rats | [ |
| Male C57/BL6N (HFD and low dose STZ (50 m/kg, i.p.) | 200 mg/kg, p.o. |
Significant reduction in FBG, HOMA_IR, plasma and liver triglyceride. Histologically, structural integrity of hepatocyte and glycogen reserve was partially restored by catalpol in diabetic liver. Glucokinase and PPAR-γ gene and PPAR-γ protein was upregulated in liver of catalpol treated group | [ |
| Rats | 10, 50, 100 mg/kg, |
Endothelial damage of thoracic aorta was attenuated significantly ROS level of thoracic aorta and serum level of 8-iso-PGF2α were decreased significantly Serum NO and SOD levels were remarkably elevated Expression of Nox4, p22phox mRNA, and protein in thoracic aorta were significantly reduced Catalpol has protective effect on endothelial of T2DM which may be associated with the down-regulation of Nox4 and p22phox expression, inhibiting oxidative stress | [ |
| Male Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats | 30, 60, and 120 mg/kg, p.o. |
Catalpol (60 and 120 mg/kg) significantly decreased the RBG, GSP and BUN but no difference in plasma creatinine level. Significantly reduced Ang II, TGF-β1, CTGF, FN, and Col IV concentrations in renal cortex. Reduced the mRNA expression of TGF-β1 and CTGF in renal cortex. Reduced the kidney hypertrophy, kidney weight index and microscopic damage of glomeruli | [ |
| C57BLKS/J db/db mice | Chow diet supplemented with catalpol (1 g/kg), |
Significant reduction of body weight in catalpol treated group from 8 weeks of catalpol treatment. Significant reduction of water consumption in catalpol treated group from 12 weeks onwards of catalpol consumption. Fasting blood glucose levels in the catalpol group were significantly lower than that of the model group from the 4th to 16th week catalpol treatment. Insig1, Scd2, and Slc5a8 genes in kidney was restored by catalpol | [ |
Figure 3Molecular changes by catalpol for antidiabetic activity.
Effect of catalpol in experimental models of cardiovascular disorders.
| Experimental Model | Dose and Duration | Key Findings of Catalpol | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adult male rats (30 min of myocardial ischemia and 3 h of reperfusion) | 5 mg/kg, i.p., |
Increased Akt and eNOS phosphorylation, NO production, anti-oxidant capacity and reduced MI/R-induced iNOS expression and superoxide anion production in I/R hearts Peroxynitrite radical formation was markedly reduced in myocardial tissue. Significantly improved cardiac functions, reduced myocardial infarction, apoptosis and necrosis of cardiomyocytes after Myocardial ischemia/reperfusion (MI/R) injury | [ |
| Isoproterenol (ISO)-induced myocardial infarction | 10 mg/kg, i.p. |
Significant protection against myocardial infarction. Attenuated serum LDH and CK-MB level. Increased myocardial SOD and MDA level. Reduced the expression of inflammatory markers (TNF-α and IL-1β) genes and proteins in myocardial tissue. | [ |
| Isoproterenol (ISO)-induced myocardial infarction | 5 and 10 mg/kg/day, i.p. |
Catalpol pretreatment (10 mg/kg) attenuated the dropping of SBP, DBP, and MBP in ISO treated MI rats. Catalpol (5 and 10 mg/kg) showed improvement in +LVdp/dtmax LVEDP. Catalpol (5 and 10 mg/kg) showed higher plasma apelin levels whereas, catalpol (10 mg/kg) significantly increased myocardium apelin and APJ expression than the ISO group. Catalpol pretreatment (5 and 10 mg/kg) reduced the rate of cell apoptosis in the left ventricular tissues Significant reduction in Bax expression and increased Bcl-2 expression in the left ventricular tissues Significant decrease in the caspase-3 and caspase-9 activity in myocardial tissue | [ |
| Isoprenaline (10 mg/kg, s.c) induced MI in SD rats | 10, 20, 40 mg/kg, p.o. |
Catalpol reduced S-T elevation in MI rats in ECG recording. Plasma SOD level is increased whereas MDA, LDH, and CK level decreased. These effects are marked in 20, and 40 mg/kg. The peripheral blood Endothelial progenitor cells (CD34+/CD133+/VEGFR2+) count was increased in catalpol treatment (0.51%, 0.97%, and 3.22% respectively with 10, 20, and 40 mg/kg of catalpol). Notch1 and Jagged1 protein expression in myocardial tissue was significantly increased after catalpol treatment. Inflammatory cell infiltration and myocardial tissue damage was attenuated by catalpol | [ |
| H9c2 embryonic rat cardiac cells | 0.1, 1, and 10 mg/mL |
Marked elevation in autophagy-related proteins (Beclin1, LC3, and ULK) in catalpol-treated cardiac cells. Significant anti-apoptotic and antioxidative effect of catalpol was observed and linked to autophagy. Anti-apoptotic and anti-oxidant effect of catalpol was completely abashed in presence of autophagy inhibitor 3-Methyladenine. Marked elevation in mitophagic related proteins (ATG5, Beclin 1, LC3, p62). Tamoxifen, an estrogen receptor inhibitor completely blocked the upregulation of catalpol induced mitophagic related proteins | [ |
| High-cholesterol fed diet to male New Zealand White rabbits | 5 mg/kg/day, |
Remarkable reduction of TC, TG, and LDL-C in serum. Whereas, HDL-C was elevated. Significant reduction in the level of TNF-α, IL-6, MCP-1, soluble VCAM-1, and soluble ICAM-1 in the serum. Significant reduction in VCAM-1, MCP-1, TNF-α protein, iNOS, MMP-9, and NF-κB protein65 in the aortic arch Significant anti-atherosclerosis effect | [ |
| Middle cerebral artery occlusion in Rats | 5 mg/kg, i.p. |
Catalpol improved behavioral impairment, cerebral blood flow in rats after cerebral ischemia. Angiogenesis was increased based on the increased expression of von Willebrand Factor and proliferating cell nuclear antigen expression. EPO, EPOR, JAK2, p-JAK2, STAT3, p-STAT3, and VEGF protein expression in the brain tissue was significantly improved. Catalpol increased angiogenesis after stroke and it could be due to activation of JAK2-STAT3 signaling pathway | [ |
| Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) induced apoptosis in Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) | 0.1, 1, and 10 μg/mL, |
Significantly and dose dependently reduced H2O2- induced intracellular ROS release. Increased the Bcl-2 expression, Akt activation and Bad phosphorylation. Significantly decrease the Bax expression. Significant anti-apoptotic effect | [ |
Effect of catalpol in experimental models of cancer.
| Experimental Model | Dose and Duration | Key Findings of Catalpol | References |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Human gastric cancer cells (MKN-45) Athymic nude mice | Catalpol (in vitro): 2.5, 5, 10, 20, 40, 80, or 160 µM for 24 h |
Reduced proliferation and migration of cancer cells (as shown by suppression of MMP-2, α-SMA, RhoA, ROCK1, and N-cadherin) Induced apoptosis in cancer cells (as shown by elevation of apoptosis-associated markers, cleaved Caspase-3 and PARP Prevented tumor growth in xenograft nude mice | [ |
| Human solid tumor cell lines (A2780, HBL-100, HeLa, SW1573, T-47D and WiDr) | Catalpol: 1, 2, 3, or 5 µm for 24 h |
Showed antiproliferative activity Cell cycle arrest at G1 phase Reduced expression of Cyclin D1 | [ |
| Human non–small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cells- A549 cells |
Significantly inhibited the TGF-β1-induced cell migration and invasion of A549 cells. Attenuated MMP-2 and MMP-9 expression. Significant attenuation of Smad2/3 activation and NF-κB signaling pathways induced by TGF-β1 in A549 cells | [ | |
| Human colorectal cancer cells (HCT116) | Catalpol: 0, 25, 50, or 100 µg/mL for 48 h |
Inhibited HCT116 cancer cell proliferation via the downregulation of the PI3K-Akt signaling pathway Induced apoptosis of HCT116 cancer cells via increased activities of caspase-3 and caspase-9, and upregulation of microRNA-200 expression | [ |
|
Colon cancer cells (CT26) C57BL6 mice and SD rats | Catalpol: 2.5, 5, 10, 20, 40, or 80 µM for 24 and 48 h |
Inhibited proliferation and growth of CT26 cancer cells in vitro and in vivo Suppressed tumor cell-induced vascularization of endothelial cells and rat aortic ring angiogenesis Reduced expression of angiogenic markers, VEGF, VEGFR2, bFGF and HIF-1α in colon cancer tissues Halted the expression of pro-inflammatory factors, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, COX-2, and iNOS | [ |
| Randomized, placebo-controlled parallel clinical study in patients that had undergone surgical resection for locally advanced colon adenocarcinoma (n = 345) | Catalpol: 10 mg/kg twice daily for 12 weeks |
Reduced serum levels of CA 19-9, CEA, MMP-2, and MMP-9 (colon cancer biomarkers) compared to the placebo group Reduced tumor recurrences and improvement in overall survival compared to the placebo and positive control group | [ |
| Human breast cancer cells (MCF-7) | Catalpol: 0, 25, 50, or 100 µg/mL for 24, 48 and 72 h |
Reduced proliferation and induced apoptosis in MCF-7 cancer cells Reduced expression of the tumor invasion enzyme, MMP-16 Upregulated expression of microRNA-146a (reducing metastatic potential) | [ |
| Human osteosarcoma cancer cells (MG63 and U2OS) | Catalpol: 20, 40, or 80 µm for 48 h |
Reduced progression, viability and migration of osteosarcoma cells Decreased expression of RACK1 and MMP-2 indicating cancer cell migration inhibition Induced apoptosis in cancer cells as shown by improved cleavage of Caspase-8, Caspase-3, Caspase-9 and PARP | [ |
Other biological effects of catalpol and their underlying mechanism.
| Experimental Model | Dose and Duration | Key Findings of Catalpol | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lipopolysaccharide (50 μg/kg, i.p.)/ | 2.5, 5, 10 mg/kg, i.p. |
Catalpol attenuated serum ALT and AST level and exhibited hepatoprotective effect Catalpol ameliorated hepatic tissue pathological changes (hemorrhagic necrosis, destruction of hepatic architecture, massive infiltration of inflammatory cells). Catalpol decreases MDA production, MPO, TNF-α production NF-κB activation. Catalpol dose dependently decreased the NF-κB p65 and IκBα phosphorylation and increased the expression of Nrf2 and HO-1 | [ |
| Triptolide (TP) induced hepatotoxicity in Human normal hepatocytes (L-02 cells) | 2, 10, 50, and 250 μg/mL |
Catalpol significantly reduced TP-induced inhibition of nuclear factor erythroid-2-related factor-2 (Nrf2) transcription. Catalpol (10 μg/mL) was showed best protective activity against TP-induced hepatocyte injury. Catalpol significantly reduce ALT and AST leakage due to TP-induced hepatocyte injury. Catalpol (10 μg/mL) increased HO-1 and NQO1, Nrf2 protein expression. Nrf2/ARE pathway activation Catalpol exhibited significant hepatoprotective effect | [ |
|
Hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) SD rats | Catalpol (in vitro): 0.625, 1.25, 2.5, 5, 10, 20, or 40 µM for 24 h |
Protected liver from CCl4-induced damage by mitigating hepatic steatosis, necrosis and fibrotic septa Down-regulated pro-inflammatory cytokines, IL-1β, TNF- α, IL-18, IL6, and COX-2 | [ |
| 14 months old SD female rats (ageing model) | 1, 3, and 5 mg/kg, p.o. |
Prevented the ovary index (g/100 g body weight) loss. Catalpol normalized the ovarian ultrastructure at 3 mg/kg. Catalpol (3 and 5 mg/kg) reduced the apoptosis of ovarian granule cells. Catalpol significantly increased the levels of estradiol and progesterone and reduced the levels of FSH and LH. Catalpol significantly protected ovarian failure | [ |
Pharmacokinetics of catalpol in different studies.
| Sample | Rat Plasma | Rat Plasma | Rat Plasma | Rat Plasma | Rat CSF |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dose | 50 mg/kg, p.o. | 6 mg/kg, i.v. | 10 mg/kg, i.v. | 8 mg/kg, p.o. | 6 mg/kg, i.v. |
| Tmax (h) | 1.333 ± 0.408 | - | - | 2.8 ± 0.837 | 0.08 ± 0.02 |
| Cmax (ng/mL) | 23,318 ± 10,468 | 23 617.4 ± 914.7 | - | 1680 ± 120 | 675.9 ± 198.4 |
| T1/2 (h) | 1.212 ± 0.388 | 0.71 ± 0.23 | 0.984 ± 0.229 | 3.275 ± 1.192 | 1.52 ± 0.74 |
| AUC (0–t) | - | 11 432.3 ± 1582.5 ng·h/mL | 5951.125 ± 1247.247 µg·h/L | 584.80 ± 107.29 µg·min/mL | 594.5 ± 81.3 ng·h/mL |
| AUC (0–∞) | 69,520 ± 22,927 ng·h/mL | 11 532.9 ± 1643.0 ng·h/mL | 5954.076 ± 1248.205 µg·h/L | 666.30 ± 194.60 µg·min/mL | 671.5 ± 109.1 ng·h/mL |
| MRT (0–∞) (h) | 3.273 ± 0.365 | 0.70 ± 0.20 | 0.0454 ± 0.140 | - | 2.12 ± 1.0 |
| V (L/kg) | 1.428 ± 0.681 | - | 0.348 ± 0.075 | - | - |
| CL (L/h/kg) | 0.824 ± 0.317 | - | 0.348 ± 0.075 | 0.9 ± 0.24 | - |
| Method | LC/MS/MS | HPLC–APCI–MS/MS | LC–ESI-MS/MS | UPLC–MS | HPLC–APCI–MS/MS |
| Reference | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ |