PtaquilosideCAS# 87625-62-5 |
Quality Control & MSDS
Number of papers citing our products
Chemical structure
3D structure
Cas No. | 87625-62-5 | SDF | Download SDF |
PubChem ID | 13962857 | Appearance | Powder |
Formula | C20H30O8 | M.Wt | 398.19 |
Type of Compound | Sesquiterpenoids | Storage | Desiccate at -20°C |
Solubility | Soluble in Chloroform,Dichloromethane,Ethyl Acetate,DMSO,Acetone,etc. | ||
Chemical Name | (2R,3aR,7S,7aR)-7-hydroxy-2,5,7-trimethyl-3a-[(2S,3R,4S,5S,6R)-3,4,5-trihydroxy-6-(hydroxymethyl)oxan-2-yl]oxyspiro[3,7a-dihydro-2H-indene-6,1'-cyclopropane]-1-one | ||
SMILES | CC1CC2(C=C(C3(CC3)C(C2C1=O)(C)O)C)OC4C(C(C(C(O4)CO)O)O)O | ||
Standard InChIKey | GPHSJPVUEZFIDE-YVPLJZHISA-N | ||
Standard InChI | InChI=1S/C20H30O8/c1-9-6-20(28-17-15(25)14(24)13(23)11(8-21)27-17)7-10(2)19(4-5-19)18(3,26)16(20)12(9)22/h7,9,11,13-17,21,23-26H,4-6,8H2,1-3H3/t9-,11-,13-,14+,15-,16-,17+,18+,20-/m1/s1 | ||
General tips | For obtaining a higher solubility , please warm the tube at 37 ℃ and shake it in the ultrasonic bath for a while.Stock solution can be stored below -20℃ for several months. We recommend that you prepare and use the solution on the same day. However, if the test schedule requires, the stock solutions can be prepared in advance, and the stock solution must be sealed and stored below -20℃. In general, the stock solution can be kept for several months. Before use, we recommend that you leave the vial at room temperature for at least an hour before opening it. |
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About Packaging | 1. The packaging of the product may be reversed during transportation, cause the high purity compounds to adhere to the neck or cap of the vial.Take the vail out of its packaging and shake gently until the compounds fall to the bottom of the vial. 2. For liquid products, please centrifuge at 500xg to gather the liquid to the bottom of the vial. 3. Try to avoid loss or contamination during the experiment. |
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Shipping Condition | Packaging according to customer requirements(5mg, 10mg, 20mg and more). Ship via FedEx, DHL, UPS, EMS or other couriers with RT, or blue ice upon request. |
Description | 1. Ptaquiloside is a natural toxin produced by bracken (Pteridium aquilinum [L.] Kuhn), it shows genotoxicity. 2. Ptaquiloside has immunosuppressive effects, it reduces NK cell activities by enhancing metallothionein expression, which is prevented by selenium. 3. Ptaquiloside has carcinogenic effects. |
Targets | Immunology & Inflammation related |
Ptaquiloside Dilution Calculator
Ptaquiloside Molarity Calculator
1 mg | 5 mg | 10 mg | 20 mg | 25 mg | |
1 mM | 2.5114 mL | 12.5568 mL | 25.1136 mL | 50.2273 mL | 62.7841 mL |
5 mM | 0.5023 mL | 2.5114 mL | 5.0227 mL | 10.0455 mL | 12.5568 mL |
10 mM | 0.2511 mL | 1.2557 mL | 2.5114 mL | 5.0227 mL | 6.2784 mL |
50 mM | 0.0502 mL | 0.2511 mL | 0.5023 mL | 1.0045 mL | 1.2557 mL |
100 mM | 0.0251 mL | 0.1256 mL | 0.2511 mL | 0.5023 mL | 0.6278 mL |
* Note: If you are in the process of experiment, it's necessary to make the dilution ratios of the samples. The dilution data above is only for reference. Normally, it's can get a better solubility within lower of Concentrations. |
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Genotoxic activity and inhibition of soil respiration by ptaquiloside, a bracken fern carcinogen.[Pubmed:16398109]
Environ Toxicol Chem. 2005 Nov;24(11):2751-6.
Ptaquiloside (PTA) is a natural toxin produced by bracken (Pteridium aquilinum [L.] Kuhn). Assessment of PTA toxicity is needed because PTA deposited from bracken to soil may leach to surface and groundwater. Inhibition of soil respiration and genotoxic activity of PTA was determined by a soil microbial carbon transformation test and an umu test, respectively. In the carbon transformation test, sandy loam soil was incubated at five different initial concentrations of PTA for a period of 28 d, after which glucose was added and respiration measured for 12 consecutive hours. The tests were performed at 20 degrees C and soil moisture content of approximately 15%. For soil material sampled in the autumn, initial PTA concentrations ranging from 0.008 to 40.6 microg PTA/g dry soil were tested. From fitting of data by a sigmoidal function, a 10% effect dose (ED10) was estimated to 13 microg PTA/ g dry soil, with an upper 95% confidence limit of 43 microg PTA/g dry soil and a 95% lower confidence limit of -infinity microg PTA/g dry soil. For soil material sampled in late winter, initial PTA concentrations ranging from 1.56 to 212 microg PTA/g dry soil were tested, resulting in an ED10 value of 55 microg PTA/g dry soil, with an upper 95% confidence limit of 70 microg PTA/g dry soil and a 95% lower confidence limit of 40 microg PTA/g dry soil. The genotoxic activity of PTA was determined using the umu test without and with metabolic activation (addition of S9 rat liver homogenate). In tests with addition of S9, the induction ratio exceeded the critical ratio of 1.5 at a PTA concentration of 46 +/- 16 microg/ml and, in tests without S9, the critical ratio was exceeded at a PTA concentration of 279 +/- 22 microg/ml. The genotoxicity of PTA is comparable to that of quercetin, another bracken constituent. The toxicity of PTA toward microorganisms prolongs the persistence of PTA in terrestrial environments, increasing the risk of PTA leaching to drainage and groundwater.
Ptaquiloside reduces NK cell activities by enhancing metallothionein expression, which is prevented by selenium.[Pubmed:23274088]
Toxicology. 2013 Feb 8;304:100-8.
Pteridium aquilinum, one of the most important poisonous plants in the world, is known to be carcinogenic to animals and humans. Moreover, our previous studies showed that the immunosuppressive effects of Ptaquiloside, its main toxic agent, were prevented by selenium in mouse natural killer (NK) cells. We also verified that this immunosuppression facilitated development of cancer. Here, we performed gene expression microarray analysis in splenic NK cells from mice treated for 14 days with Ptaquiloside (5.3 mg/kg) and/or selenium (1.3 mg/kg) to identify gene transcripts altered by Ptaquiloside that could be linked to the immunosuppression and that would be prevented by selenium. Transcriptome analysis of Ptaquiloside samples revealed that 872 transcripts were expressed differentially (fold change>2 and p<0.05), including 77 up-regulated and 795 down-regulated transcripts. Gene ontology analysis mapped these up-regulated transcripts to three main biological processes (cellular ion homeostasis, negative regulation of apoptosis and regulation of transcription). Considering the immunosuppressive effect of Ptaquiloside, we hypothesized that two genes involved in cellular ion homeostasis, metallothionein 1 (Mt1) and metallothionein 2 (Mt2), could be implicated because Mt1 and Mt2 are responsible for zinc homeostasis, and a reduction of free intracellular zinc impairs NK functions. We confirm these hypotheses and show increased expression of metallothionein in splenic NK cells and reduction in free intracellular zinc following treatment with Ptaquiloside that were completely prevented by selenium co-treatment. These findings could help avoid the higher susceptibility to cancer that is induced by P. aquilinum-mediated immunosuppressive effects.
Carcinogenic effects of ptaquiloside in bracken fern and related compounds.[Pubmed:10970694]
Br J Cancer. 2000 Oct;83(7):914-20.
Consumption of the bracken fern Pteridium aquilinum by cattle has been shown to induce bladder and intestinal carcinomas in cattle and to cause a number of diseases in other farm animals. An unstable glucoside named Ptaquiloside, containing a reactive cyclopropane ring, has been isolated from the fern and its potent carcinogenicity proven. Nineteen of 31 ferns tested by chemotaxonomic methods in Japan have been found to contain potentially carcinogenic Ptaquilosides as have Cheilanthes sieberi and Pteridium esculentum. Hydrolysis of Ptaquilosides leads to pterosins; under milder conditions a dienone which is believed to be the primary carcinogen is obtained. Hypacrone, a sesquiterpine containing a reactive cyclopropane ring, has been isolated from Hypolepis punctata and its structure proved by synthesis. Illudins, structurally similar to Ptaquiloside, have been isolated from the basidiomycete Omphalotus illudens. These give anti-tumour activity and similar reactivity with nucleophiles to Ptaquiloside. Compound CC-1065, a highly toxic antibiotic also containing a cyclopropane ring, has been isolated from Streptomyces zelensis. The mechanism of its reactivity with DNA has been compared to that of Ptaquiloside and the small structural differences between carcinogenic and anti-tumour activity discussed. Both CC-1065 and adozelesin, a synthetic analogue with anti-tumour activity, have been shown to alkylate the N-3 atom of adenine in a certain sequence of DNA. The reactivity of cysteine with Ptaquilosides and illudins is discussed, as is the role of cysteine alkylating agents in apoptosis.