Pharmacological properties of traditional medicines. XXII. Pharmacokinetic study of mulberroside A and its metabolites in rat

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Abstract

To identify the active components in Mori Cortex (Chinese medicine), Mori Cortex extracts were administered orally to rats, and then blood plasma, urine, and bile were analyzed. The results showed only a few remaining metabolites of mulberroside A. Consequently, to clarify the transitional properties of mulberroside A derivatives to tissues and the in vivo abundance ratio of mulberroside A compounds, the pharmacokinetics of mulberroside A derivatives were investigated in this study. When Mori Cortex extracts were administered orally, mulberroside A was only detected in small quantities in the plasma, and its bioavailability was about 1%. This is due to the first pass effect, by which most mulberroside A was converted into oxyresveratrol and transported into the circulating blood, and its absorption ratio was estimated at about 50%. Oxyresveratrol was also found to be transported to tissues at high rates. As a result, when analyzing the pharmacological activity of the Mori Cortex in vitro, it is more useful to study oxyresveratrol than mulberroside A.

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Qiu, F., Komatsu, K. I., Saito, K. I., Kawasaki, K., Yao, X., & Kano, Y. (1996). Pharmacological properties of traditional medicines. XXII. Pharmacokinetic study of mulberroside A and its metabolites in rat. Biological and Pharmaceutical Bulletin, 19(11), 1463–1467. https://doi.org/10.1248/bpb.19.1463

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