AI Article Synopsis

  • - Berberine (BBR) is known for various health benefits, such as lowering cholesterol, managing diabetes, protecting the heart, and reducing inflammation, but its low plasma levels in patients challenge explanations for these effects.
  • - A study using advanced liquid chromatography techniques examined how BBR and its metabolites are distributed in various tissues of rats after oral administration, revealing that BBR is concentrated in organs like the liver, kidneys, and brain.
  • - The findings suggest that the higher concentrations of BBR and its metabolites in tissues compared to blood could explain its positive effects on human health, as these compounds remain stable in vital organs.

Article Abstract

Berberine (BBR) has been confirmed to have multiple bioactivities in clinic, such as cholesterol-lowering, anti-diabetes, cardiovascular protection and anti- inflammation. However, BBR's plasma level is very low; it cannot explain its pharmacological effects in patients. We consider that the in vivo distribution of BBR as well as of its bioactive metabolites might provide part of the explanation for this question. In this study, liquid chromatography coupled to ion trap time-of-flight mass spectrometry (LC/MS(n)-IT-TOF) as well as liquid chromatography that coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) was used for the study of tissue distribution and pharmacokinetics of BBR in rats after oral administration (200 mg/kg). The results indicated that BBR was quickly distributed in the liver, kidneys, muscle, lungs, brain, heart, pancreas and fat in a descending order of its amount. The pharmacokinetic profile indicated that BBR's level in most of studied tissues was higher (or much higher) than that in plasma 4 h after administration. BBR remained relatively stable in the tissues like liver, heart, brain, muscle, pancreas etc. Organ distribution of BBR's metabolites was also investigated paralleled with that of BBR. Thalifendine (M1), berberrubine (M2) and jatrorrhizine (M4), which the metabolites with moderate bioactivity, were easily detected in organs like the liver and kidney. For instance, M1, M2 and M4 were the major metabolites in the liver, among which the percentage of M2 was up to 65.1%; the level of AUC (0-t) (area under the concentration-time curve) for BBR or the metabolites in the liver was 10-fold or 30-fold higher than that in plasma, respectively. In summary, the organ concentration of BBR (as well as its bioactive metabolites) was higher than its concentration in the blood after oral administration. It might explain BBR's pharmacological effects on human diseases in clinic.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3815028PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0077969PLOS

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