1. Academic Validation
  2. Microbial transformation of ginsenoside Rb(1) by Acremonium strictum

Microbial transformation of ginsenoside Rb(1) by Acremonium strictum

  • Appl Microbiol Biotechnol. 2008 Jan;77(6):1345-50. doi: 10.1007/s00253-007-1258-4.
Guang-Tong Chen 1 Min Yang Yan Song Zhi-Qiang Lu Jin-Qiang Zhang Hui-Lian Huang Li-Jun Wu De-An Guo
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 College of Traditional Chinese Materia Medica, Shenyang Pharmaceutical University, Shenyang, 110016, People's Republic of China.
Abstract

Preparative-scale fermentation of ginsenoside Rb(1) (1) with Acremonium strictum AS 3.2058 gave three new compounds, 12beta-hydroxydammar-3-one-20 (S)-O-beta-D -glucopyranoside (7), 12beta, 25-dihydroxydammar-(E)-20(22)-ene-3-O-beta-D -glucopyranosyl-(1-->2)-beta-D -glucopyranoside (8), and 12beta, 20 (R), 25-trihydroxydammar-3-O-beta-D -glucopyranosyl-(1-->2)-beta-D -glucopyranoside (9), along with five known compounds, ginsenoside Rd (2), gypenoside XVII (3), ginsenoside Rg(3) (4), ginsenoside F(2) (5), and compound K (6). The structural elucidation of these metabolites was based primarily on one- and two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance and high-resolution electron spray ionization mass spectra analyses. Among these compounds, 2-6 are also the metabolites of ginsenoside Rb(1) in mammals. This result demonstrated that microbial culture parallels mammalian metabolism; therefore, A. strictum might be a useful tool for generating mammalian metabolites of related analogs of ginsenosides for complete structural identification and for further use in pharmaceutical research in this series of compounds. In addition, the biotransformation kinetics was also investigated.

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