1. Polygalacto-fucopyranose from marine alga as a prospective antihypertensive lead.
- Author
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Surabhi G, Dhara S, Maneesh A, Chakraborty K, Valluru L, and Chenchula SR
- Subjects
- Animals, Antihypertensive Agents isolation & purification, Antihypertensive Agents toxicity, Cadmium Chloride, Disease Models, Animal, Drug Discovery, Fucose analogs & derivatives, Fucose isolation & purification, Fucose toxicity, Hypertension chemically induced, Hypertension physiopathology, Lethal Dose 50, Male, Rats, Wistar, Telmisartan pharmacology, Rats, Antihypertensive Agents pharmacology, Blood Pressure drug effects, Fucose pharmacology, Hypertension drug therapy, Sargassum chemistry
- Abstract
Consumption of marine alga-based polysaccharides as additional functional foods can endow with health benefits by diminishing the risk of chronic diseases. A polygalacto-fucopyranose characterized as [→1)-2, 4-SO
3 -α-Fucp-(3 → 1)-{2-SO3 -α-Fucp-(3→}] with [(4 → 1)-6-OAc-β-Galp-(4→] side chain isolated from marine alga Sargassum wightii exhibited potential antihypertensive activity. Upon treatment with studied polygalactofucan (50 mg/kg BW), serum hypertension biomarkers troponin-T (1.3 pg/mL), troponin-I (1.2 μg/dL) and angiotensin-II converting enzyme (0.18 pg/mL) were significantly recovered in hypertensive rats compared to disease control. Serum cardiovascular risk indices of diseased rats were significantly decreased (< 10%, p < 0.05) after administration of the studied galactofucan (50 mg/kg BW) related to hypertension group (> 17%), and were comparable with standard antihypertensive agent telmisartan (8.3-10.2% at 2 mg/kg BW). The studied compound was safe for consumption as obvious from the high LD50 value (>5 g/kg), and could be developed as a prospective functional food ingredient attenuating the pathophysiological attributes causing hypertension-related conditions., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2021
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