Dose-dependent bioavailability indicators for curcumin and two of its novel derivatives
Autor: | Hanan Fouad, Fatma M. Taha, Abdulrahman L. Al-Malki, Amira Hassouna, Hafez F. Hafez, Mohamed Abd El Aziz, Mohamed Farid El-Asmer, Ameen M Rezq, Hanan H. Ahmed, Taha A. Kumosani |
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Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: |
chemistry.chemical_classification
Clinical Biochemistry Biological activity General Medicine Pharmacology Biochemistry Bioavailability chemistry.chemical_compound medicine.anatomical_structure Enzyme chemistry Cavernous tissue In vivo Oral administration medicine Curcumin Molecular Medicine Conjugate |
Zdroj: | BioFactors. 40:132-137 |
ISSN: | 0951-6433 |
DOI: | 10.1002/biof.1118 |
Popis: | Novel water-soluble curcumin derivatives have been developed to overcome low in vivo bioavailability of curcumin. The aim of this work is to assess the potential utility of certain downstream targets as bioavailability indicators of systemic activity of pure curcumin and two novel water-soluble curcumin derivatives (NCD) by constructing dose-dependent response curves and to prove whether this novel curcumin derivatives retained, improved, or abolished biological activity of pure curcumin when applied in vivo. Pure curcumin (CUR), curcumin-carboxy derivative (NCD-1), and curcumin protein conjugate (NCD-2) were administered orally to rats at escalating doses: 37, 74, 148, and 296 μM/kg body weight, respectively. Plasma levels of GST activity, cavernous tissue levels of cGMP, and enzymatic activity of both HO-1 and GST were assessed one and half and 24 hours after oral administration of curcumin formulae. This study showed that there was a progressive elevation of cavernous tissue levels of cGMP and enzymatic activity of both HO-1 and GST in a dose-dependent manner that was maintained for 24 h with CUR, NCD-1, and NCD-2. Plasma GST activity was decreased by the lowest doses on the curve. The three dose-dependent bioavailability indicators as surrogates of curcumin and two of its novel derivatives are valid in the studied range of concentration and extended time. The novel curcumin derivatives still conserve with improvement the biological activity of natural curcumin when applied in vivo. © 2013 BioFactors, 40(1):132–137, 2014 |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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