Planta medica
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Bulb of Fritillaria cirrhosa is an important traditional Chinese herbal medicine. According to the Chinese Pharmacopoeia (1995), it is commonly used as an antitussive and expectorant. Many young bulbs from species of Fritillaria are similar to those of F. cirrhosa, but they are different in price and quality. ⋯ Based on sequences analyses of the 5S-rRNA spacer region from the 7 species, a specific sequence was found in F. cirrhosa. A pair of specific primers was designed for differentiating the bulbs of F. cirrhosa from each other by PCR. This result indicated that the method is rapid, more accurate and applicable in identification of the bulbs of F. cirrhosa at the DNA level.
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The influence of the oral administration of an aqueous-ethanolic extract of a mixture of Thujae occidentalis herba, Baptisiae tinctoriae radix, Echinaceae purpureae radix and Echinaceae pallidae radix, on the course of Influenza A virus infection in Balb/c mice was investigated. The extract was administered to mice via the drinking water for 14 days starting 6 days before intranasal infection with Influenza A virus. The progress of infection was recorded during a time range of 21 days. ⋯ Determination of consolidation score and virus titer were performed for each lung. The data show that the oral treatment with the extract induced a statistically significant increase in the survival rate, prolonged the mean survival time and reduced lung consolidation and virus titer. The experiments demonstrate that the plant immunomodulator given 6 days before exposure is a potent inhibitor of Influenza A virus pathology in vivo.
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A cell suspension culture of Taxus wallichiana (Himalayan Yew) was grown in shake flasks and a 20-L airlift bioreactor running for 28 days in a batch mode, and its capacity to accumulate paclitaxel and baccatin III was measured. When both culture types were in the highest productive state (from day 24 to day 28), there was a greater accumulation of paclitaxel and baccatin III in the bioreactor culture than in the shake flask culture (factor of 2.0 and 1.2, respectively). ⋯ It seems that these improvements were mainly due to adequate aeration and mixing of the culture in the bioreactor. The maximum yield observed for paclitaxel (20.84 mg x L(-1) day 24) and baccatin III (25.67 mg x L(-1) day 28) represents a productivity of 0.90 mg x L(-1) d(-1) and 0.93 mg x L(-1) x d(-1) respectively.
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Letter Comparative Study
Evidence for paclitaxel from three new endophytic fungi of Himalayan yew of Nepal.
Taxus wallichiana, collected from the Himalayan region of Nepal, yielded, among others, three different endophytic fungi including Sporormia minima, Trichothecium sp., and an unidentified dimorphic fungus. Each was shown to produce paclitaxel in a culture medium. Each of these fungi represents a new report as a paclitaxel producer. The production of paclitaxel was confirmed by an immunoassay that utilized monoclonal antibodies, TLC chromatography as well as high performance liquid chromatography combined with on-line mass spectrometry.
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The influence of the oral administration of an aqueous-ethanolic extract of a mixture of Thujae occidentalis herba, Baptisiae tinctoriae radix, Echinaceae purpureae radix and Echinaceae pallidae radix, on the immune response in mice was investigated. The data show that the extract significantly enhances the antibody response to sheep red blood cells (SRBC), induces an increase in the numbers of splenic plaque forming cells (PFC) and an increase in the titer of specific antibodies in the sera of treated animals. The long-term application of the extract over several months also stimulated the PFC-response without affecting spleen weight, total cell yield per spleen or white blood cell count in mice.