Intestinal bacteria and filamentous fungi convert baccharin from Brazilian green propolis into non-cytotoxic metabolites.
1/5 보강
Brazilian green propolis has recognised commercial and medicinal value, with baccharin identified as one of its major bioactive compounds, exhibiting cytotoxicity against breast and prostate cancer ce
APA
Dias Fonseca A, Pena Ribeiro V, et al. (2025). Intestinal bacteria and filamentous fungi convert baccharin from Brazilian green propolis into non-cytotoxic metabolites.. Natural product research, 1-8. https://doi.org/10.1080/14786419.2025.2545978
MLA
Dias Fonseca A, et al.. "Intestinal bacteria and filamentous fungi convert baccharin from Brazilian green propolis into non-cytotoxic metabolites.." Natural product research, 2025, pp. 1-8.
PMID
40790937 ↗
Abstract 한글 요약
Brazilian green propolis has recognised commercial and medicinal value, with baccharin identified as one of its major bioactive compounds, exhibiting cytotoxicity against breast and prostate cancer cell lines. However, the activity of its metabolites remains poorly understood. This study investigated the biotransformation of baccharin by intestinal bacteria and filamentous fungi that mimic human metabolism. Cultures were incubated with 600 µL of baccharin (0.1 mg/mL in ethanol), yielding three metabolites. , , , and hydrolysed baccharin to drupanin, with up to 79.1% conversion by after 48 h. and catalysed hydrolysis, hydroxylation, and β-oxidation. Baccharin and its metabolites, evaluated at concentrations ranging from 1.56 to 200 µM, showed low or no cytotoxicity in normal (fibroblasts, MCF-10A, PNT-2) and tumour (MCF-7, MDA-MB-231, DU-145, PC-3) cell lines. Cisplatin and doxorubicin showed IC values of 4.6-85.9 µM and <0.78-5.99 µM, respectively, across cell lines.