| Literature DB >> 35454101 |
Xiaoping Song1,2,3, Lina Wang3, Daidi Fan1,2,3.
Abstract
It is well known that ginsenosides-major bioactive constituents of Panax ginseng-are attracting more attention due to their beneficial pharmacological activities. Ginsenoside Rd, belonging to protopanaxadiol (PPD)-type ginsenosides, exhibits diverse and powerful pharmacological activities. In recent decades, nearly 300 studies on the pharmacological activities of Rd-as a potential treatment for a variety of diseases-have been published. However, no specific, comprehensive reviews have been documented to date. The present review not only summarizes the in vitro and in vivo studies on the health benefits of Rd, including anti-cancer, anti-diabetic, anti-inflammatory, neuroprotective, cardioprotective, ischemic stroke, immunoregulation, and other pharmacological effects, it also delves into the inclusion of potential molecular mechanisms, providing an overview of future prospects for the use of Rd in the treatment of chronic metabolic diseases and neurodegenerative disorders. Although biotransformation, pharmacokinetics, and clinical studies of Rd have also been reviewed, clinical trial data of Rd are limited; the only data available are for its treatment of acute ischemic stroke. Therefore, clinical evidence of Rd should be considered in future studies.Entities:
Keywords: biotransformation; ginsenoside Rd; pharmacological activities
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35454101 PMCID: PMC9031344 DOI: 10.3390/biom12040512
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Figure 1Schematic illustration of biotransformation of major ginsenosides Rb1, Rb2, and Rc to Rd (⟶ major pathway; ⤏ minor pathway).
Bioconversion of major ginsenosides into Rd.
| Enzymes | Transformation Pathways | Optimum | Yield and Reaction Scale | Ref. | Year |
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| Enzymatic Transformation | |||||
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| α- | Rc ⤏ Rd | pH 7.5, 37 °C | / | [ | 2012 |
| α- | Rc ⤏ Rd | pH 6.0, 30 °C | 99.50% | [ | 2013 |
| α- | Rc ⤏ Rd | pH 5.5, 80 °C, 227 U enzyme/mL | a molar yield of 100% | [ | 2013 |
| α- | Rc ⤏ Rd | pH 5.0, 85 °C | 99.40% | [ | 2016 |
| α- | Rc ⤏ Rd | pH 5.0, 40 °C | 90% | [ | 2021 |
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| α- | Rb2 ⤏ Rd | pH 7.0, 40 °C | / | [ | 2020 |
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| β-glucosidase Tt-BGL from Thermotoga thermarum DSM 5069T | Rb1 ⤏ Rd | pH 4.8, 90 °C | 95% | [ | 2013 |
| β-glucosidase Bgp3 from Microbacterium esteraromaticum | Rb1 ⤏ Rd ⤏ CK | pH 7.0, 40 °C | 77% | [ | 2012 |
| glycosidase Bgp2 from Microbacterium esteraromaticum | Rb2 ⤏ Rd ⤏ 20(S)-Rg3 | pH 7.0, 40 °C | 65% | [ | 2013 |
| β-Glucosidase Bgy2 from Lactobacillus brevis | Rb1 ⤏ Rd⤏F2 ⤏ CK | pH 7.0, 30 °C | 69%91% | [ | 2016 |
| β-glucosidase from Aspergillus niger KCCM 11239 | Rb1 ⤏ Rd ⤏ Rg3 | pH 4.0, 70 °C | / | [ | 2012 |
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| Pectinase coupled with one-pot process | Rb1 ⤏ Rd | pH 6.0, 52.5 °C | 83.14% | [ | 2020 |
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| Rb1 ⤏ Rd | / | 94.9% in shake flasks, 89% in 10 L fermenter | [ | 2010 | |
| Rb1 ⤏ Rd | / | 92.44% | [ | 2012 | |
| Rb1 ⤏ Rd | pH 5.0, 37 °C | 94.9% in shake flasks85% in 2 L fermenter | [ | 2015 | |
| Rb1 ⤏ Rd | pH 5.0, 32 °C | 86% | [ | 2016 | |
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| Rb1 ⤏ Rd⤏ Rh2 | / | / | [ | 2013 |
| Bacterial strain MAH-16T | Rb1 ⤏ Rd | pH 5.0–7.0, 20–40 °C | / | [ | 2018 |
| Bacterial strain MAHUQ-46T | Rb1 ⤏ Rd | pH 7.5, 30 °C | / | [ | 2021 |
| Bacterial strain FW-6T | Rb1 ⤏ Rd | / | / | [ | 2013 |
| Bacterium G9y | Rc ⤏ Rd | pH 7.0, 45 °C | / | [ | 2021 |
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| Gut bacteria | Rb1 ⤏Rd ⤏ F2 ⤏ CK | / | / | [ | 2013 |
| Rb1 ⤏ G-XVII and Rd ⤏ F2⤏ CK | pH 6.0–8.0, 30 °C | 99% | [ | 2011 | |
| Rb1 ⤏ G-XVII and Rd ⤏ F2 ⤏ CK | pH 6.0, 30 °C | 88% | [ | 2013 | |
| Probiotics | Rb1 ⤏ Rd ⤏ F2⤏ CK | / | / | [ | 2021 |
| Rb1 ⤏ Rd | pH 6.0, 40 °C | / | [ | 2016 | |
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| Rb1 ⤏ Rd | pH 5.0, 40 °C | / | [ | 2020 | |
“⤏” means convert to, “/” means not mentioned.
Anti-cancer and anti-diabetic effects and the molecular mechanisms of Rb.
| Anti-Cancer | ||||||
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| Disease Type | Cell Lines/Animal | Effective Concentration/Dose | Effects | Mechanisms of Action | Refs. | Year |
| Cervical cancer | Cell lines: HeLa | In vitro: IC50 = 150.5 ± 0.8 μg/mL (48 h) | Inhibited proliferation and induced cell apoptosis | Bcl-2↓, Bax↑, mitochondrial transmembrane potential↓, caspase-3↑ | [ | 2006 |
| Glioblastoma | Cell lines: U251 | In vitro: IC50 = 88.89 μM (24 h); IC50 = 13.20 μM (28 h); IC50 = 9.55 μM (72 h) | Inhibited proliferation, promoted cell apoptosis, enhanced the expression of telomerase | caspase-3↑, Bcl-2↓, hTERT↓ | [ | 2019 |
| Cell lines: U251, H4 (HTB148), U87 MG (HTB-14) cells, NHA | In vitro: Rd (100, 200 µM) | Reduced proliferation and migration | miR-144-5p↑ | [ | 2020 | |
| Gastric cancer | Cell lines: SGC-7901Cell lines: MKN-45 | In vitro: IC50 = 86.96 ± 0.23 μg/mL (SGC-7901, 48 h) and 71.70 ± 2.16 μg/mL (MKN-45, 48 h) | Inhibited proliferation, induced apoptosis and cell cycle arrest at G0/G1 phase | Cyclin D1↓, caspase-3↑, caspase-9↑, Bax/Bcl-2↑ | [ | 2020 |
| Cell lines: AGS, MCF-7 | In vitro: IC50 =131.2 μM (AGS) | Inhibited proliferation | TRPM7 channel activity↓ | [ | 2013 | |
| Liver cancer | Cell lines: HepG2 | In vitro: EC50 = 18.26 μM | Combination of CA4P and Rd inhibited proliferation and induced apoptosis | HIF-1α↓, PI3K/AKT/mTOR↓ | [ | 2021 |
| Cell lines: HepG2 | In vitro: IC50 = 256.3 μM (24 h) and 172 μM (48 h) | Inhibited migration and invasion | MMP↓, MAPK↓ | [ | 2012 | |
| Colorectal cancer | Cell lines: HT29 | In vitro: IC50 = 277 μg/mL (48 h) | Inhibited proliferation | caspase 3↑, stathmin 1c, PCNA↓, rho GDP dissociation inhibitor (GDI) alpha↓, reticulocalbin 1 precursor↓, nudix hydrolase NUDT5↓, microtubule-associated protein RP/EB family↓, proteasome β 6 subunit↓, tyrosine 3/tryptophan 5-monooxygenase activation protein, epsilon↓, tropomyosin 1 (α)↑, glutathione S-transferase-P1↑, annexin 5↑, Nm23 protein↑, tropomodulin 3↑, and stratifin ↑ | [ | 2009 |
| Cell lines: HT29 and SW620 | In vitro: 0, 10, 50, 100 μM (72 h) | Inhibited metastasis | Bound to EGFR with a high binding affinity, stemness- and EMT-related genes↓ | [ | 2019 | |
| Cell lines: HUVEC animals: LoVo xenograft BALB/C mice | In vitro: Rd (2, 10, 50 µM | Suppressed neovascularization in tumors, normalized the structure of tumor vessels, and improved the anti-tumor effect of 5-FU | / | [ | 2019 | |
| Animals: heterozygous C57BL/6J-ApcMin/+ mice | In vivo: Rd (20 mg/kg, 8 weeks) | suppressed cancer-promoting signaling markers, reduced the size and the number of the polyps, and improved intestinal barrier | iNOS↓, STAT3/pSTAT3↓, Src/pSrc↓, reinstated mucosal architecture, improved mucosal immunity, promoted beneficial bacteria, cancer cachexia associated bacteria↓ | [ | 2017 | |
| Breast cancer | Cell lines: HEK293, MDA-MB-231, AU565, and T47D | In vitro: Rd (100–400 µM) | Suppressed the viability of TRPM7-expressing breast cancer cells | S phase↑, G0/G1 phase↓ | [ | 2020 |
| Cell lines: AGS, MCF-7 | In vitro: IC50 = 131.2 µM (AGS) and 154.3 µM (MCF-7) | Inhibited proliferation, induced cell apoptosis | TRPM7 channel activity↓ | [ | 2013 | |
| Cell lines: 4T1, MDA-MB-231 | In vitro: Rd (50, 100, 150 μM, 72 h) | Suppressed cell migration and invasion | miR-18a-mediated Smad2↓ | [ | 2016 | |
| Cell lines: HUVECs, MDA-MB-231 | In vitro: Rd (5, 10, 25, 50 µM) | Inhibited VEGF-induced migration, tube formation and proliferation of HUVECs, Inhibited proliferation and induced apoptosis | AKT/mTOR/P70S6↓ | [ | 2017 | |
| Cell lines: MCF-7, MCF-7/ADR | In vitro: Rd (10, 100 µg/mL, 24 h) | Reversed doxorubicin resistance in MCF-7/ADR cells | MDR1 protein↓ | [ | 2010 | |
| Lung cancer | Cell lines: A549 | In vitro: IC50 = 246.4 µM (24 h) | Inhibited proliferation, induced G0/G1 phase arrest, reversed cisplatin resistance | NRF2 pathway↓ | [ | 2019 |
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| Diabetes | Animals: postnatal day 1 SD rats | In vivo: Rd (5, 10, 20, 50 μM) | Ameliorated the cell viability of MG-treated astrocytes | Improved insulin signaling and inhibited apoptosis | [ | 2014 |
| Cell lines: human pancreatic islets | In vitro: Rd (0.1,1,10 μM, 72 h) | Inhibited the progress of death of cultured human pancreatic islets, no effects on glucose-induced insulin and C-peptide stimulation secretion | Apoptosis of the islet cells↓, Bax↓, Bcl2↑, and caspase-3↓ | [ | 2019 | |
| Animals: type-2 diabetic db/db mice | In vivo: GS-E3D (100 or 250 mg/kg/d, oral, 6 weeks) | Renal protective roles | ROS↓ | [ | 2021 | |
| Diabetic | Cell lines: HUVEC | In vitro: Rd (1, 3, 10, 30 μM, 24 h) | Ameliorated diabetes-driven vascular damage, modulated oxidative stress and apoptosis | AMPK↑, SIRT1↑, AMPK/SIRT1 interaction↑ | [ | 2022 |
“/” means not mentioned, “↑” means upregulation, “↓” means downregulation.
Figure 2Anti-cancer mechanism of ginsenoside Rd. “↓” means downregulation, “↑” means upregulation.
Anti-inflammatory and antioxidative effects and the molecular mechanisms of Rd.
| Anti-Inflammatory | ||||||
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| Disease Type | Cell Lines/Animal | Effective Concentration/Dose | Effects | Mechanisms of Action | Refs. | Year |
| Chronic hepatitis | Cell lines: HepG2 | In vitro: Rd (IC50 = 12.05 ± 0.82 µM) | Anti-inflammatory activity | NF- | [ | 2012 |
| Neuroinflammation | Cell lines: mouse primary neuron-glia | In vivo: Rd (1, 10, 50 µM) | Protected dopaminergic neurons against LPS-neurotoxicity | iNOS↓, COX-2↓, iNOS↓, PGE2↓ | [ | 2007 |
| Osteoarthritis | Cell lines: S12 | In vitro: Rd (100 μg/mL) | Exerted a protective effect against the cartilage degradation of OA | p-p38↓, MMP3↓ | [ | 2009 |
| Gastritis | Animals: ethanol- or indomethacin-induced gastric mucosal lesions in rat model | In vivo: Rd (100 mg/kg) | Showed gastroprotective effects on ethanol- and indomethacin-induced gastric mucosal lesions | / | [ | 2007 |
| Colitis | Animals: DSS-induced murine colitis model | In vivo: Rd (10, 20, 40 mg/kg) | Ameliorated DSS-induced colitis, inhibited inflammatory cell recruitment into colonic tissue | p62-driven mitophagy-mediated NLRP3 inflammasome↓, | [ | 2018 |
| Animals: TNBS-induced ulcerative colitis rat model | In vivo: Rd (10, 20, 40 mg/kg/d, orally | Against TNBS-induced recurrent ulcerative colitis and increased superoxide dismutase and glutathione peroxidase activities | Inhibited neutrophil infiltration and promoted the antioxidant capacity of the damaged colonic tissue | [ | 2012 | |
| Animals: TNBS-induced ulcerative colitis rat model | In vivo: Rd (10, 20, 40 mg/kg/d, 7 days) | Attenuated the inflammatory response to TNBS-induced relapsing colitis | MPO↓, proinflammatory cytokine TNF-α, IL-1β, and IL-6↓, p-p38↓, JNK↓ | [ | 2012 | |
| Inflammatory bowel diseases(IBD) | Animals: indomethacin-induced IBD rat model | In vivo: Rd (10, 20, 40 mg/kg, 7 days) | Stimulated the proliferation and differentiation of endogenous intestinal stem cells in IBD model rats, improved recovery of intestinal function | Bmi, CDX-2, and Msi-1↑ | [ | 2020 |
| Allergic rhinitis | Cell lines: RBL-2H3Animals: ovalbumin-induced AR mice model | In vivo: Rd (10 μM, 18 h) | Alleviated ovalbumin-induced allergic rhinitis in mice | IgE, IL-4, IL-5, and IL-13↓, restored the composition of gut microbiota | [ | 2019 |
| Inflammatory | Cell lines: RAW264.7Animals: ICR mouse | In vitro: LPS (5 mg/kg) + Rd (2, 10, 50 mg/kg) | Anti-inflammatory effects | NF-kB↓, iNOS↓, COX-2↓, NO↓, PGE2↓ | [ | 2013 |
| Cell lines: HepG2 | In vitro: Rd (IC50 = 3.47 μM) | Suppressed inflammatory responses | NF-κB↓, COX-2↓ and iNOS↓ | [ | 2014 | |
| Animals: carrageenan-induced hind paw edema rat model | In vivo: Rd (12.5, 25, 50 mg/kg, i.m.) | Anti-inflammatory effects against carrageenan-induced edema | NF-kB↓ | [ | 2012 | |
| Animals: carrageenan -induced rat paw edema rat model | In vivo: Rd (12.5, 25, 50 mg/kg) | Reduced the inflammatory cell infiltration into inflammatory sites, inhibited the tissue lipid peroxidation, increased the antioxidant enzyme activities, and suppressed the proinflammatory enzyme expressions | NF-κB↓, p-ERK↓, p- JNK↓ | [ | 2013 | |
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| Antioxidative | Animals: senescence-accelerated mice (SAM) of 10 months | In vivo: Rd (1 or 5 mg/kg/d, 30 days) | Attenuated the oxidative damage and enhanced the antioxidative defense system | Regulated the GSH/GSSG redox status | [ | 2004 |
| Animals: synchronized L4 larvae worms | In vivo: TG (10 μg/mL) | Has antiaging effects and only Rd prolonged the lifespan of C. elegans to levels comparable to total ginsenoside (TG) | Via lipid metabolism and activating the stress response signaling pathway | [ | 2021 | |
| Cell lines: PC12 | In vitro: Rd (1, 10 μM) | Antioxidative properties | ROS↓, MDA↓, SOD↑, GSH-Px↑, stabilized the mitochondrial membrane potential | [ | 2008 | |
| Cell lines: H4IIE | In vitro: Rd (1–30 μg/mL) | Antioxidative effects; increased both cellular glutathione (GSH) content and the protein level of γ-glutamylcysteine ligase heavy chain | p65↑ via NF-κB-dependent γ-glutamylcysteine ligase induction | [ | 2007 | |
“/” means not mentioned, “↑” means upregulation, “↓” means downregulation.
Figure 3Anti-inflammatory mechanism of ginsenoside Rd. “↓” means downregulation.
Neuroprotective effects and the molecular mechanisms of Rd.
| Disease Type | Cell Lines/Animal | Effective Concentration/Dose | Effects | Mechanisms of Action | Refs. | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alzheimer’s disease (AD) | Animals: Aβ1–40 induced AD rat model | In vivo: Rd (10, 30 mg/kg/d, 30 days) | Protected cognitive impairment, improved memory function, alleviated Aβ1–40 induced inflammation | caspase-3↓, apoptosis↓ | [ | 2012 |
| Cell lines: Aβ25–35 induced primary hippocampal neurons | In vitro: Rd (0.1, 1, 10 μM) | Ameliorated Aβ25–35 induced damage in primary cultured hippocampal neurons, inhibited Aβ25–35 induced apoptosis and oxidative stress, reversed Aβ 25–35 induced alterations | ROS↓, MDA↓, GSH-Px↑, | [ | 2015 | |
| Animals: APP transgenic mice | In vivo: Rd (10 mg/kg) | Improved learning and memory ability in APP transgenic mice | NF- | [ | 2015 | |
| Cell lines: cortical neurons from mice E17–18 embryosAnimals: Aβ1–40 induced AD rat model and APP transgenic mice | In vitro: Rd (2.5, 5 μM, 12 h) | Inhibited OA-induced tau phosphorylation in vivo and in vitro | Altered the functional balance of GSK-3β and PP-2A | [ | 2013 | |
| Cell lines: Neuro-2a | In vitro: Rd (2.5 to 5 µg/mL) | Enhanced the expression of cholinergic markers and neuronal differentiation | ChAT/VAChT↑, ERK and AKT↓; MAP-2↑, p75↑, p21↑, NGF-induced TrkA↑ | [ | 2014 | |
| Animals: OA induced AD rat model | In vivo: Rd (2.5, 5 μM) | Protected SD rats and cultured cortical neurons against OA-induced toxicity | Decreased OA-induced the hyperphosphorylation of tau by the increase in activities of PP-2A | [ | 2011 | |
| Animals: ovariectomy (OVX) rat model | In vivo: Rd (10 mg/kg, 2 months) | Enhanced learning and memory function of OVX rats and attenuated cognitive and memory impairment | α-Secretase and sAPPα↑, β-secretase and Aβ↓, p-ER-α at Ser118 residue↑ | [ | 2017 | |
| Parkinson’s disease (PD) | Cell lines: SH-SY5Y | In vitro: Rd (0.5, 1 μM, 24 h) | Reduced oxidative stress, improved mitochondrial integrity and functions, and inhibited apoptosis | Bax/Bcl-2↓, Cyt c↓, caspase-3↓ | [ | 2017 |
| Cell lines: SH-SY5Y | In vitro: Rd (1, 10 μM) | Exerted protective effect on neurodegenerative diseases, attenuated MPP+-induced cell death | Oxidative stress↓, mitochondrial function↑ and inhibited MPP+ induced ATP depletion, Bax/Bcl-2↓, Prevented p-AKT downregulation induced by MPP+ treatment | [ | 2015 | |
| Cells: CCL4-treated primary dopaminergic cell cultures | In vitro: Rd (1, 5, 10 µM) | Protected dopaminergic neurons against CCl4-induced neurotoxicity; inhibited both oxidative stress and inflammation | LDH↓, NO↓, superoxide formation↓ | [ | 2016 | |
| Neurotoxicity | Animals: lead (Pb)-treated old rat model | In vivo: Rd (50 mg/kg/d, 7 days) | Neuroprotective effects in old rats following acute Pb exposure | IL-1β↓, IL-6↓, TNF-α↓ | [ | 2013 |
| Cells: TMT-treated hippocampal neurons | In vitro: Rd (1–40 µg/mL, 24 h) | Prevented TMT-induced cell apoptosis; attenuated the tremor seizures and cognitive decline; reduced neuronal loss | Bcl-2↑, Bcl-2↓, caspase-3↓ | [ | 2017 | |
| Animals: KA-induced ICR mice | In vivo: Rd (50 mg/kg) | Attenuated the KA-induced lethal toxicity | p-ERK↑ and p-CREB↓ | [ | 2003 | |
| Spinal cord injury (SCI) | Animals: spinal cord injury (SCI) rat model | In vivo: Rd (12.5, 25, 50 mg/kg) | Attenuated SCI-induced secondary injury through reversing the redox-state imbalance, inhibiting the inflammatory response and apoptosis | MAPK↓, MDA↓, GSH and SOD↑, TNF-α, IL-1β↓ | [ | 2016 |
| Mitochondria isolated from mouse spinal cord tissues | In vitro: Rd (0.1, 1, 10 µM, 60 s) | Protected isolated spinal cord mitochondria against Ca2+ induced MPT and cytochrome c release in a mitochondrial protein kinases-dependent manner | Ca2+ induced Cyt c↓, intramitochondrial AKT and ERK↑ | [ | 2014 | |
| Stress-related disorders | Animals: immobilization stress (IS) or | In vivo: Rd (5 mg/kg/d, oral, 5 days) | Alleviated the IS-induced anxiety/depression and | Myeloperoxidase activity↓, NF-κB↓, NF-κB+/CD11c+ cell population↓ | [ | 2020 |
| Animals: CRS induced cognitive impairment mice model | In vivo: Rd (20, 40 mg/kg/d, 28 days) | Improved cognitive impairment subjected to chronic stress | Oxidative stress↓, inflammation↓, hippocampal BDNF-mediated CREB signaling pathway↑ | [ | 2020 | |
| Animals: chronic cerebral hypoperfusion (CCH) mice model | In vivo: Rd (10, 30 mg/kg/d, 21 days) | Ameliorated CCH-induced impairment of learning and memory behaviors | Neuron survival↑, BDNF expression↑ | [ | 2016 | |
| Cell lines: mouse adrenocortical tumor cell line Y1 | In vitro: Rd (2 μM) | Inhibited corticosterone secretion in the cells and impeded ACTH-induced corticosterone biosynthesis | cAMP/PKA/CREB signaling pathway↓; attenuated the induction of MC2R and MRAP by ACTH | [ | 2020 | |
| Noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL) | Animals: noise-induced guinea pigs | In vivo: Rd (30 mg/kg, i.p.) | Exerted neuroprotective effects after noise-induced auditory system damage; ameliorated auditory cortex injury associated with military aviation NIHL | SIRT1/PGC-1α signaling pathway↑ | [ | 2020 |
| Neural cells | Cells: neural stem cells | In vitro: Rd (0.1, 1, 10, 50 μM) | Had beneficial effects on learning and memory, promoted the size and number of neurospheres; but did not affect the differentiation of neural stem cells into neurons, astrocytes and oligodendrocytes | / | [ | 2012 |
| Cells: neural stem cells | In vitro: Rd (0.1, 1 μM) | Promoted the differentiation of neurospheres into astrocytes and increased the production of astrocytes | Number of neurons↓, astrocytes↑ | [ | 2005 | |
| Cell lines: PC12 | In vitro: Rd (10 µM) | Promoted the neurite outgrowth of PC12 cells | GAP-43↑ via ERK and ARK signaling pathways | [ | 2016 | |
| Cells: rat cortical neurons | In vitro: Rd (1, 3, 10, 30 µM) | Prevented glutamate-induced apoptosis in rat cortical neurons | Inhibited voltage-independent Ca2+ entry | [ | 2010 |
“/” means not mentioned, “↑”means upregulation, “↓”means downregulation.
Figure 4Neuroprotective mechanism of ginsenoside Rd. “↓” means downregulation, “↑” means upregulation.
Ischemic stroke, cardiovascular protection, and immunological activities and the molecular mechanisms of Rd.
| Disease Type | Cell Lines/Animal | Effective Concentration/Dose | Effects | Mechanisms of Action | Refs. | Year |
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| Ischemic stroke | Animals: MCAO rat models | In vivo: Rd (30 mg/kg) | Reduced mtDNA and nDNA damages and had the neuroprotective function | Survival rate and neurological function↑, cell apoptosis↓, cleaved caspase-3↓, NEIL1 and NEIL3↑ | [ | 2016 |
| Cell lines: cortical neurons cells from embryonic day 18 SD ratsAnimals: MCAO rat models | In vitro: Rd (1, 3, 10, 30, 100 μM) | Neuroprotectant for the treatment of ischemic stroke; exerted an inhibitive effect on NMDAR-triggered currents and sequential excitotoxicity | DAPK1-mediated NR2B phosphorylation↓, calcineurin activity↓ | [ | 2020 | |
| Cell lines: cortical neuronsAnimals: MCAO rat models | In vitro: Rd (10 μM) | Improved the behavior score, infarct volume, and viability of the cultured neurons after ischemia | Hyperphosphorylation of NR2B subunit↓ and expression levels of NR2B subunit in cell membrane↓ | [ | 2016 | |
| Cells: microglia from P1 newborn SD rats, BV2, MC3T3-E1 | In vitro: Rd (1, 10, 50, 100 μM) | Improved the outcome of patients with ischemic stroke | Microglial proteasome activity and sequential inflammation↓ | [ | 2016 | |
| Animals: MCAO rat models | In vivo: Rd (1, 10, 100 μM) | Attenuated the pathogenesis of cerebral ischemia-induced BBB damage, suppressed proteasome-mediated inflammation | Proteasome activity and NF-κB/MMP-9 pathway↓ | [ | 2020 | |
| Cell lines: BV-2 | In vitro: Rd (0.1, 1, 10 μM) | Attenuated cerebral injury after stroke | NLRP3↓, OGD/R-induced BV-2 cell injury↓, Drp1-mediated mitochondrial fission↓, Drp1↓ | [ | 2020 | |
| Cardiovascular diseases | Cell lines: A10 embryonic rat thoracic aortic, rat aorta smooth muscle cells prepared from rat thoracic aorta | In vitro: Rd (100 μM) | Had an effect on cardiovascular diseases and inhibited Ca2+ entry | Through ROCC and SOCC without effects on VDCC and Ca2+ release | [ | 2006 |
| Cerebrovascular remodeling | Cell lines: BAVSMCs from rat basilar arteries | In vitro: Rd(2.5, 5, 10, 20, 40 μM, 48 h) | Attenuated basilar hypertrophic inward remodeling in 2k2c hypertensive rats without affecting systemic blood pressure; attenuated hypertensive cerebrovascular remodeling | Inhibited voltage-independent Ca2+ entry and BAVSMC proliferation, but not with VDCC-mediated Ca2+ entry | [ | 2009 |
| Cell lines: BASMCs from rat basilar arteries | In vivo: Rd (10 μM) | Potentiated H2O2-induced cell death and cell apoptosis | Cyt c release↑, caspase-9/caspase-3↑, Bcl-2/Bax↓ | [ | 2011 | |
| Cell lines: RAW264.7 | In vitro, Rd (20 μM) | Prevented the development of atherosclerosis | Through voltage-independent Ca2+ channels, SR-A↓, ox-LDL↓, cholesterol ↓ | [ | 2011 | |
| Cell lines: ventricular myocytes from the hearts of male SD rats | In vitro: Rd (IC50 = 32.4 ± 7.1 μM) | Protected the heart and inhibited ICa,L | ICa,L peak amplitude↓, the current-voltage (I-V) curve↑, changed the steady-state activation curve of ICa,L and slowed down the recovery of ICa,L from inactivation | [ | 2015 | |
| Cardiac hypertrophy | Cells: rat neonatal cardiac myocytes (NRCMs) from 24 h old SD ratsAnimal: C57BL/6 mice | In vitro: Rd (150 µg/mL) | Improved cardiac dysfunction and remodeling induced by pressure overload | AKT↓, calcineurin A↓, ERK1/2 and TGF-β1↓ | [ | 2019 |
| Myocardial I/R injury | Cells: neonatal rat cardiomyocytes (NRCs) | In vitro: Rd (10 µM) | Augmented rat cardiac function, reduced myocardial infarct size, apoptotic cell death | Left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF)↑, ±dP/dt↑;inhibited caspase-9 and caspase-3, p-AKT and GSK-3β↑, and Bcl-2/Bax ratio↑ | [ | 2013 |
| Cells: neonatal rat cardiomyocyte (NRCs) | In vivo: Rd (50 mg/kg) | Improved cardiac function and attenuated myocardial infarction | Serum creatine kinase, LDH and cTnI↓, Nrf2, HO-1 and NQO1↑ | [ | 2015 | |
| Vascular endothelial injury | Cell lines: HUVECs, THP-1Animal: nicotine-administered SD rat model | In vitro: Rd (30 μM, 24 h) | Prevented nicotine-induced cardiovascular diseases | Vascular endothelial NO signaling↑, platelet aggregation and vasoconstriction↓, endothelial cell adhesion↓ | [ | 2020 |
| Multiple sclerosis (MS) | Animals: MOG35–55 induced EAE mouse model | In vivo: Rd (40 mg/kg/d, 35 days) | Ameliorated clinical severity and improved histopathology, reduced BBB dysfunction | IFN-γ↓, IL-4↑; BDNF and NGF↑ | [ | 2014 |
| Cells: Mouse bone marrow stem cellsAnimals: EAE C57BL/6 mice | In vivo: 50 μM | Ameliorated the severity of EAE and attenuated the characteristic signs of disease; had modulation potential on gut microbiota in EAE mice | IL-6 and IL-17↓, TGF-β and IL-10↑, modulated Treg/Th17 imbalance | [ | 2020 | |
| Guillain–Barré syndrome (GBS) | Cells: mouse bone marrow stem cells | In vitro: Rd(10, 30, 50 μM) | Preventive function on GBS, attenuated experimental autoimmune neuritis in mice | Modulated monocytes infiltration and macrophage polarization, regulated monocyte phenotype | [ | 2021 |
| Immunosuppressive | Cells: mouse spleen T lymphocytesAnimals: allo-skin transplantation rat model | In vivo: Rd (25 mg/kg) | Antagonized transplant rejection | Th1 cytokines IL-2↓, IFN-γ↓, TNF-α↓, IL-12↓, Th2 cytokine IL-10↑ | [ | 2012 |
| Immunoadjuvant | Animals: OVA-immunized mouse model | In vivo: Rd (25 μg, 2 weeks) | Had immunological adjuvant activity, and elicited a Th1 and Th2 immune response, enhanced the Con A-, LPS-, and OVA-induced splenocyte proliferation | Regulated production and gene expression of Th1 cytokines and Th2 cytokines | [ | 2007 |
| Strains: | In vitro: Rd (1 mg/mL) | Protected mice against disseminated candidiasis and enhanced Th1 immunity | Elicited higher titers of Th1 type antibody and a Th1-dominant immune response | [ | 2013 | |
| Anaphylactoid reactions | Cells: RBL-2H3 MCs, mouse peritoneal mast cells (MPMC) isolated from mouse, LAD2 cells Animals: ICR male mice (18–22 g) | In vitro: Rd (0.11, 0.21, 0.42 mM) | Potential allergens, induced the release of mediators associated with anaphylactoid reactions | β-hexosaminidase↑, histamine↑, translocation of phosphatidylserine↑, Ca2+↑ | [ | 2017 |
“↑”means upregulation, “↓”means downregulation.
Other health-beneficial activities and the molecular mechanisms of Rd.
| Disease Type | Cell Lines/Animal | Effective Concentration/Dose | Effects | Mechanisms of Action | Refs. | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Renal injury | Animals: cisplatin-induced acute renal failure rat model | In vivo: Rd (1, 5 mg/kg/d, 30 days) | Decreased the severity of renal injury induced by cisplatin | MDA↓, blood urea nitrogen↓, Cr↓, urinary excretion of glucose↓ | [ | 2000 |
| Cell lines: LLC-PK1 cells cultured with cisplatin | In vitro: Rd (125 μM) | Ameliorated cisplatin-induced renal injury, caused restoration of the renal function | DNA fragmentation↓, apoptosis↓, urea nitrogen and creatinine↓ | [ | 2001 | |
| Cell lines: mouse polarized macrophagesAnimals: renal IRI mouse model | In vitro: Rd (10, 20, 50, 100 μg/mL) | Alleviated mouse acute renal ischemia/reperfusion injury | M1 macrophage polarization↓ | [ | 2016 | |
| Acute lung injury (ALI) | Animals: LPS-induced ALI mouse model | In vivo: Rd (25, 50 mg/kg) | Protected mice against LPS-induced ALI; improved survival in endotoxemic mice | PI3K/AKT↓ | [ | 2021 |
| Small intestinal transport | Animals: carbachol/BaCl2-induced accelerated small intestinal transit mouse model | In vivo: Rd (0.4, 1.0, 2.0 mg/kg) | Ameliorative effects on the carbachol-induced accelerated small intestinal transport | Intestinal motility↓, cholinergic nervous system↓ | [ | 2003 |
| Anti-obesity | Animal: high-fat diet-induced obese mouse model | In vivo: Rd (15 mg/kg/d, 23 days) | Ameliorated obesity and insulin resistance | Cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP)↑ | [ | 2020 |
| Whitening activity | Cell lines: Melan-a cellsAnimal: zebrafish | In vitro: Rd (10, 20 μM) | Inhibited melanin biosynthesis | AKT↑, ERK↑ | [ | 2017 |
| Anti-alopecia | Cells: HFsAnimals: shaved skin B57CL/6 mouse model | In vivo: Rd and Rb1 (300 mg/kg/d, 35 days) | Promoted hair growth | p63 expression↑ in hair follicles | [ | 2012 |
| Anti-osteoporotic | Cell lines: MC3T3-E1 | In vitro: Rd (10, 20, 40 μM) | Stimulated osteoblastic differentiation and mineralization | AMPK/BMP-2/Smad signaling pathways↑ | [ | 2012 |
| Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) | Cells: D2325 fibroblasts from a DMD patient | In vitro: Rd (5 μM) | Ameliorated some of the skeletal muscle phenotypes caused by dystrophin deficiency | FLT3 signaling↑ | [ | 2020 |
| Wound healing effects | Cell lines: KPCs, HDFsAnimal: hairless wound mice model | In vitro: Rd (0.1, 1, 10 μM) | Promoted skin regeneration | Collagen type 1↑, matrix metalloproteinase-1 (MMP-1) ↓, cAMP-dependent protein kinase pathway↑ | [ | 2013 |
| Irradiation-induced damage | Cell lines: rat intestinal epithelial IEC-6 cells | In vitro: Rd (2.5, 5, 10, 20, 40 μM, 24 h) | Protected and rescued rat intestinal epithelial cells from irradiation-induced apoptosis | Bax/Bcl-xL↓, Cyt c↓, cleaved-caspase-3↓, PI3K/AKT↑, MEK↓, mitochondria/caspase pathway↓ | [ | 2008 |
“↑”means upregulation, “↓”means downregulation.
Pharmacokinetics and clinical studies of Rd.
| Compound | Subject | Dose | Pharmacokinetics Parameters | Ref. | Year | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cmax (ng/mL) | Tmax (h) | AUC (ng h/L) | MRT (h) | CL/F (L·h−1) | T1/2 (h) | |||||
|
| ||||||||||
| Rd | Dogs | 2 mg/kg, i.g. | 81.0 ± 24.6 | 2.67 ± 1.17 | 1890.2 ± 668.6 | 25.5 ± 3.84 | 1.14 ± 0.40 | 24.2 ± 2.85 | [ | 2007 |
| 0.2 mg/kg, i.v. | / | / | 76,403.4 ± 15,880.6 | 26.7 ± 1.63 | 0.0020 ± 0.0005 | 39.4 ± 12.0 | ||||
| Rd | Kunming mice | 20 mg/kg, | / | / | 305.0 ± 22.3 | / | 0.066 ± 0.005 | 14.19 ± 2.37 | [ | 2012 |
| / | / | 293.2 ± 279.4 | / | 0.280 ± 0.172 | 12.83 ± 2.92 | |||||
| / | / | 312.6 ± 139.5 | / | 0.569 ± 0.306 | 14.02 ± 10.57 | |||||
| GTSSL | SD rats | 400 mg/kg, i.g. | 22.05 ± 2.21 | 2 | 2180.10 ± 18.69 | 12.43 ± 1.46 | / | 7.30 ± 3.32 | [ | 2015 |
| RG | ICR mice | 2 g/kg/day, 7 days | 51.7 ± 24.7 | 2.8 ± 3.3 | 1145 ± 555.6 | / | / | 40.1 ± 6.1 | [ | 2020 |
| SD rats | 6.5 ± 1.5 | 7.0 ± 2.0 | 257.8 ± 49.6 | / | / | 94.0 ± 23.7 | ||||
| Rd | Wistar rats—normal | 80 mg/kg, i.g. | 97.458 ± 1.80 | 1.00 ± 0.01 | 2061.658 ± 1011.618 | 13.997 ± 0.390 | 64.895 ± 2.255 | 9.631 ± 0.206 | [ | 2021 |
| Wistar rats—depression model | 104.959 ± 5.0 | 1.00 ± 0.03 | 2583.439 ± 1254.680 | 15.126 ± 0.671 | 55.744 ± 2.366 | 10.198 ± 0.511 | ||||
|
| ||||||||||
| Rd | 199 + 390 patients | 10, 20 mg, i.v. | / | / | / | / | / | / | [ | 2016 |
| Rd | SD rats | 60 mg/mL, i.v. | / | / | / | / | / | / | [ | 2007 |
| 10 healthy Chinese volunteers | 10 mg, i.v. | 2841.18 ± 473.03 | 0.50 ± 0.00 | 27261.63 ± 8116.88 | 17.52 ± 3.73 | 0.39 ± 0.12 | 19.29 ± 3.44 | |||
| Rd | 24 healthy Chinese volunteers | 10 mg | 2.8 ± 0.5 | 0.5 ± 0.0 | 27.3 ± 8.1(mg·h/L) | 17.5 ± 3.7 | 0.39 ± 0.12 | 19.3 ± 3.4 | [ | 2010 |
| 45 mg | 10.5 ± 1.7 | 0.5 ± 0.0 | 112.6 ± 24.1 (mg·h/L) | 18.3 ± 2.7 | 0.36 ± 0.08 | 18.4 ± 2.9 | ||||
| 75 mg, i.v. | 19.3 ± 2.6 | 0.5 ± 0.0 | 208.4 ± 51.4 (mg·h/L) | 18.6 ± 2.7 | 0.37 ± 0.09 | 17.7 ± 2.0 | ||||
| Rd | 199 patients | 10, 20 mg, i.v. | / | / | / | / | / | / | [ | 2009 |
| Rd | 390 patients | 10 mg, i.v. | / | / | / | / | / | / | [ | 2012 |
| RG | 34 healthy Korean volunteers | 3 g, i.g. | 1.77 ± 2.09 | 15.12 ± 9.35 | 7.85 ± 11.24 | / | / | / | [ | 2020 |
“/” means not mentioned.