Abstract

The pharmacological effects of Polygonum cuspidatum water extract (PCWE) on lipid biosynthesis were investigated in cultured human hepatocyte HepG2 cells. The addition of PCWE (5 and 20 μg/ml), which had no effect on cell proliferation and cellular protein content, caused a marked decrease in the cellular cholesterol content, particularly, the cholesteryl ester content following 24 h of incubation. The incorporation of 14C-oleate into the cellular cholesteryl ester fraction was also reduced remarkably during incubation for 6 and 24 h. The effect of PCWE on acyl-coenzyme A–cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT) activity were studied in vitro to explore the mechanism by which PCWE inhibits cholesterol ester formation. The data confirmed that PCWE, in a dose dependent manner, remarkably inhibits ACAT activity. Among the main active chemicals of P. cuspidatum, resveratrol, a kind of flavonoid, decreased ACAT activity in a dose-dependent manner from the level of 10 −3 M. Theses results strongly suggest that PCWE reduces the cholesteryl ester formation in human hepatocytes by inhibiting ACAT.

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