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KMID : 1134820140430020224
Journal of the Korean Society of Food Science and Nutrition
2014 Volume.43 No. 2 p.224 ~ p.230
Cytoprotective Effects of Phaeophyta Extracts from the Coast of Jeju Island in HT-22 Mouse Neuronal Cells
Shin Dong-Bum

Han Eun-Hye
Park Sung-Soo
Abstract
Marine algae have long been recognized as a health and beauty food, based on its anti-tumor, anti-inflammatory and anti-obesity activities. In this study, methanol extracts were prepared from 10 different phaeophyta, after which DPPH radical scavenging and cytoprotective activities of HT-22 cells against ¥â-amyloid protein (A¥â), which has neurotoxic effects, were investigated. In DPPH experiments, Ecklonia cava and Ishige okamurai showed strong ROS scavenging activities, whereas eight other phaeophyta including Petalonia binghamiae (P. bin) showed weak ROS scavenging activities. To validate the cytoprotective effects of 10 different phaeophyta in A¥â-induced HT-22 cells, protein expression levels of APP, BACE1, iNOS, phosphorylated ERK1/2, phosphorylated p38 and phosphorylated JNK1/2 were determined along with MTT assay. In the MTT assay, P. bin showed the best effective cytoprotective activity at a concentrations of 25 ¥ìg/mL, whereas Sargassum confusum, Colpomenia sinuosa, Myelophycus simplex, and Sargassum hemiphyllum showed potential. Determination of protein expression levels related to A¥â-induced neurotoxicity in the five selected phaeophyta showed that P. bin inhibited BACE1 and iNOS expression in A¥â-induced HT-22 cells. These results indicate that the cytoprotective effects of P. bin are mediated by suppressing the pathways involving A¥â-induced ERK and p38 activation.
KEYWORD
edible phaeophyta, cytoprotection, ¥â-amyloid protein (A¥â), mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), Petalonia binghamiae
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