Effect of ginseng saponins on the survival of cerebral cortex neurons in cell cultures.
- 1 January 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Pharmaceutical Society of Japan in CHEMICAL & PHARMACEUTICAL BULLETIN
- Vol. 37 (2), 481-484
- https://doi.org/10.1248/cpb.37.481
Abstract
The effects of nerve growth factor (NGF) and saponins isolated from Panax ginseng C. A. MAYER on the survival of chick and rat embryonic cerebral cortex neurons were examined. Ginsenoside Rg1 (GRg1) exerted a survival-promoting effect on both chick and rat cerebral cortex neurons in cell cultures. Ginsenoide Rb1 (GRb1) also had an effect in the rat and displayed some influence in the chick. NGF alone exerted no effect on both neurons, although it did potentiate the GRb1 effect on chick embryonic cerebral cortex neurons, but did not alter the GRb1 effect on rat embryonic cerebral cortex neurons. NGF did not alter the survival-promoting effect of GRg1 on either chick or rat embryonic cerebral cortex neurons. The other saponins alone or with NGF exerted no effect on the survival of cerebral cortex neurons in either the chick or rat.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- NGF effects on developing forebrain cholinergic neurons are regionally specificNeurochemical Research, 1987
- Potentiation of nerve growth factor-mediated nerve fiber production in organ cultures of chicken embryonic ganglia by ginseng saponins: Structure-activity relationship.CHEMICAL & PHARMACEUTICAL BULLETIN, 1984