Maytenus ilicifolia is a medicinal plant used as a tea (infusion) for treatment of stomach ulcers. This tea furnished a polysaccharide after several purification steps, consisting of a freezing-thawing process, Fehling precipitation, ultrafiltration, and dialysis. It consisted of arabinose, galactose, galacturonic acid, 4-O-methylglucuronic acid, rhamnose, and glucose in a 42:41:6:5:4:2 molar ratio. Methylation analysis, controlled Smith degradation, and NMR spectroscopy indicated that it was a type II arabinogalactan containing a (1-->3)-linked beta-d-Galp main chain, substituted at O-6 by (1-->6)-linked beta-d-Galp chains, which were mainly substituted at O-3 by (1-->5)- and (1-->3)-linked alpha-l-Araf chains, and nonreducing end-units of alpha-l-Araf and 4-O-Me-GlcpA. This polysaccharide significantly inhibited ethanol-induced gastric lesions in rats with an ED(50) of 9.3 mg/kg, suggesting that the arabinogalactan liberated from the infusion has a protective anti-ulcer effect.
Phyllanthus niruri is a well-known herb widely used medicinally in Asia, Africa, and South America. Aqueous extraction of the intact plant provided an acidic arabinogalactan, which was characterized chemically, and its effects on peritoneal macrophage activation were determined. Methylation analyses and (13)C NMR spectroscopy showed it to have a complex structure with a (1-->4)-linked beta-Galp main chain, substituted by rhamnose, galacturonic acid, arabinose, xylose, galactose, and glucose-containing side chains, with nonreducing end-units of arabinofuranose, xylopyranose, galactopyranose, and glucopyranose. In immunological studies, the arabinogalactan stimulated superoxide anion production, when tested using peritoneal macrophages of mice, but did not interfere with the nitric oxide pathway. Thus, traditional aqueous extraction methods, such as decoction and infusion, provide a major polysaccharide, which stimulates an intense biological response in macrophages: this could represent an interesting approach in phytotherapeutic treatments.
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