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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Pentacyclic triterpenoids, alpha,beta-amyrins, suppress the scratching behavior in a mouse model of pruritus.

In the search for natural compounds useful against pruritus, alpha,beta-amyrins, the pentacyclic triterpenes isolated from the resin of popular medicinal plant Protium heptaphyllum were examined on scratching behavior induced by dextran T40 and compound 48/80 in mice. The animals were pretreated orally with alpha,beta-amyrins (50, 100 and 200 mg/kg) or cyproheptadine (10 mg/kg), an antagonist of histamine and serotonin receptors and 2 h later, they were given subcutaneous injections of dextran T40 (75 mg/kg) or compound 48/80 (3 mg/kg) into the rostral back, and scratching was quantified for 20 min. The scratching behavior induced by dextran T40 and compound 48/80 was significantly inhibited in mice pretreated with alpha,beta-amyrins (100 and 200 mg/kg) or cyproheptadine (10 mg/kg), In addition, the compound 48/80-elicited degranulation of rat peritoneal mast cells (ex vivo) was also markedly reduced in animals pretreated with alpha,beta-amyrins (100 mg/kg) or ketotifen (1 mg/kg), a known mast cell stabilizer. In the open-field test, alpha,beta-amyrins (100 and 200 mg/kg)-pretreated mice showed no impairment of spontaneous locomotion, suggesting that these triterpenoids possess no sedative activity that could account for suppression of scratching behavior. These results clearly indicate the antipruritic effect of alpha,beta-amyrins and suggest that this effect may be related to a stabilizing action on mast cell membrane.[1]

References

  1. Pentacyclic triterpenoids, alpha,beta-amyrins, suppress the scratching behavior in a mouse model of pruritus. Oliveira, F.A., Lima-Junior, R.C., Cordeiro, W.M., Vieira-Júnior, G.M., Chaves, M.H., Almeida, F.R., Silva, R.M., Santos, F.A., Rao, V.S. Pharmacol. Biochem. Behav. (2004) [Pubmed]
 
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