Abstract
Water-soluble and alkaline-soluble crude polysaccharides which were separated from
the roots or leaves of Panax ginseng C. A. Meyer, were compared for their anti-ulcer activity. Of these four polysaccharide
fractions, the water-soluble crude polysaccharide fraction (GL-2) from the leaves
and the alkaline-soluble crude polysaccharide fraction (GRA-2) from the roots prevented
HCl/ethanol-induced ulcerogenesis in mice potently. The most potent fraction, GL-2,
was further fractionated into four polysaccharide fractions by precipitation with
cethyltrimethylammonium bromide, and the weakly acidic polysaccharide fraction, GL-4,
showed the most potent inhibition of gastric lesion formation. The activity of GL-4
decreased after treatment with periodate or digestion with endo-polygalacturonase, indicating that the carbohydrate moiety may contribute to the
expression of the activity. GL-4 was further purified by anion-exchange chromatography
and gel filtration, and the most active purified polysaccharide, GL-4IIb1III was obtained. GL-4IIb1III (average relative molecular mass, 16,000d) had the nature of a pectic polysaccharide,
and was composed mainly of galactose and galacturonic acid with small proportions
of rhamnose, arabinose, mannose, glucose, and glucuronic acid. GL-4IIIb1III prevented HCl/ethanol-induced ulcerogenesis in mice dose dependently.
Key words
Panax ginseng
- anti-ulcer activity - polysaccharide - fractionation