AI Article Synopsis

  • Velvet antler, a traditional Chinese medicine, is commonly used in medicinal wine but its leftover residue is often wasted; this study examines the properties of a protein extracted from this residue.
  • The extracted velvet antler protein (VA-pro) shows high purity, specific structural characteristics, and notable amino acid content, which may contribute to its biological effects.
  • VA-pro demonstrated significant anti-tumor activities in mice, improving body weight, immune function, and inhibiting tumor growth by affecting cell cycle processes, suggesting its potential as an immune booster for cancer patients.

Article Abstract

Velvet antler is a traditional Chinese medicine with various pharmacological values, which is an important raw material for traditional Chinese medicinal wine. Nevertheless, the chemical compositions and bioactivities of velvet antler residue used for making medicinal wine are rarely reported, leading to a waste of resources. In this study, a velvet antler protein (VA-pro) was extracted from velvet antler residue by simulating the gastrointestinal digestion, and its composition, structural characteristics and in vivo anti-tumor activities were determined and investigated. VA-pro possessed high purity with a relatively low molecular weight as 22.589 kDa under HPLC, one- and two-dimensional electrophoresis, and it contained high contents of Pro, Gly, Glu and Ala. Besides, the secondary structure of VA-pro was dominated by β-turn and β-sheet, and VA-pro possessed similar protein sequence, isoelectric point and amino acid compositions to hypothetical protein G4228_020061. The in vivo results substantiated that VA-pro could improve the body weights and immune organ indices, increase the expressions of sera cytokines and regulate the distributions of T and B lymphocytes subsets in peripheral blood of S180 tumor-bearing mice. Furthermore, VA-pro could effectively inhibit solid S180 tumors growth by inducing S phase cell cycle arrest mediated through mitochondria. To summarize, our study provided theoretical support that VA-pro had the potential to be used as an immunopotentiator in immunocompromised or cancer-bearing hosts.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bioorg.2022.106304DOI Listing

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