Iminosugars of the Invasive Arboreal Amorpha fruticosa and Glycosidase Inhibition Potential
Robert J. Nash, Barbara Bartholomew, Yana B. Penkova, Ekaterina Kozuharova

TL;DR
This study explores the chemical compounds in the invasive plant Amorpha fruticosa and their potential to inhibit glycosidases, which may help lower blood sugar levels.
Contribution
The study identifies glycosidase inhibitors, pinitol, and hydroxylated pipecolic acids in A. fruticosa for the first time.
Findings
A. fruticosa pods and leaves show potent inhibition of glucosidases and hexosaminidases.
Hydroxylated pipecolic acids are likely precursors of iminosugars and contribute to antidiabetic potential.
Chemical variation among four pod collections suggests phenotypic versatility in the species.
Abstract
Amorpha fruticosa L. (Fabaceae) originates from North America and has become an aggressive invasive plant in many parts of the world. It affects the local biodiversity in many negative ways. Our previous in vivo tests of purified extract of A. fruticosa pods for antihyperglycemic activity in streptozotocin-induced diabetic spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs) revealed that the oral administration of purified extract of A. fruticosa (100 mg/kg) for 35 days to SHRs caused significant decreases in the systolic pressure, blood glucose levels, and MDA quantity. The aim of this experimental study is to test the glycosidase inhibition of several extracts of A. fruticosa pods. Methods: GC-MS, NMR, and a glycosidase inhibition assay were performed. Results: The results demonstrate strong inhibition of yeast alpha- and almond beta-glucosidases, rat intestinal hexosaminidase, and bovine…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCarbohydrate Chemistry and Synthesis · Natural Antidiabetic Agents Studies · Glycosylation and Glycoproteins Research
