Abstract

Effect of six steroidal saponins isolated from Anemarrhenae rhizoma on superoxide generation in human neutrophils was investigated. The steroidal saponins examined were anemarrhenasaponin-I (An-I), anemarrhenasaponin-Ia (An-Ia), timosaponin B-I (TB-I), timosaponin B-II (TB-II), timosaponin B-III (TB-III) and timosaponin A-III (TA-III). An-I, An-Ia, and TB-III suppressed the superoxide generations induced by N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLP) and arachidonic acid (AA) in a concentration-dependent manner, but enhanced that induced by phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA). While TB-II also suppressed and enhanced the superoxide generations induced by fMLP and PMA, respectively, the compound significantly enhanced the AA-induced superoxide generation. TB-I enhanced the fMLP-induced superoxide generation in a low concentration range (peak at 40 μM), gave no effect on the PMA-induced superoxide generation and weakly enhanced the AA-induced superoxide generation. TA-III enhanced the fMLP-induced superoxide generation more than twice as much as that by TB-I in the same concentration range. However, TA-III enhanced the PMA-induced superoxide generation and most significantly suppressed the AA-induced superoxide generation.

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