Publications by authors named "I Herke"

Ecdysteroid-containing herbal extracts, commonly prepared from the roots of , are marketed worldwide as a "green" anabolic food supplement. Herein are reported the isolation and complete H and C NMR signal assignments of three new minor ecdysteroids (compounds -) from this extract. Compound was identified as a possible artifact that gradually forms through the autoxidation of calonysterone.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ecdysteroids act as molting hormones in insects and as nonhormonal anabolic agents and adaptogens in mammals. A wide range of ecdysteroid-containing herbal extracts are available worldwide as food supplements. The aim of this work was to study such an extract as a possible industrial source of new bioactive ecdysteroids.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Phytoecdysteroids like 20-hydroxyecdysone ("ecdysterone") can exert a mild, non-hormonal anabolic/adaptogenic activity in mammals, and as such, are frequently used in food supplements. Spinach is well-known for its relatively low ecdysteroid content. Cyanotis arachnoidea, a plant native in China, is among the richest sources of phytoecdysteroids, and extracts of this plant are marketed in tons per year amounts via the internet at highly competitive prices.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The leaves and root bark of Morus alba, the white mulberry tree, are well-known traditional medicines for the treatment of type II diabetes. Several different types of constituents have been suggested to be responsible for the anti-diabetic activity of mulberry drugs, such as iminosugars, flavonoids and other phenolic compounds, glycopeptides and ecdysteroids. Our group recently suggested that a volatile-oil like fraction of the hot water extract of M.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF