Difference between revisions of "Oleanolic Acid"

From Wikiwel
Share/Save/Bookmark
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 1: Line 1:
 
[[Aids / HIV]] : Oleanolic acid was found to exhibit weak anti-HIV and weak anti-HCV activities in vitro, but more potent synthetic analogs are being investigated as potential drugs
 
[[Aids / HIV]] : Oleanolic acid was found to exhibit weak anti-HIV and weak anti-HCV activities in vitro, but more potent synthetic analogs are being investigated as potential drugs
 
* antitumor properties
 
* antitumor properties
* antiviral properties.[5]
+
* antiviral properties.
  
 
[[Tooth Decay]]
 
[[Tooth Decay]]

Revision as of 02:23, 13 May 2017

Aids / HIV : Oleanolic acid was found to exhibit weak anti-HIV and weak anti-HCV activities in vitro, but more potent synthetic analogs are being investigated as potential drugs

  • antitumor properties
  • antiviral properties.

Tooth Decay

Grapes

Jamblang

References

  • Liu J (1995). "Pharmacology of oleanolic acid and ursolic acid". Journal of Ethnopharmacology. 49 (2): 57–68. doi:10.1016/0378-8741(95)90032-2. PMID 8847885.
  • https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8847885
  • Mengoni, F; Lichtner, M; Battinelli, L; Marzi, M; Mastroianni, CM; Vullo, V; Mazzanti, G (2002). "In vitro anti-HIV activity of oleanolic acid on infected human mononuclear cells". Planta Medica. 68 (2): 111–4. doi:10.1055/s-2002-20256. PMID 11859458.
  • Yu, Fei; Wang, Qi; Zhang, Zhen; Peng, Yi-yun; Qiu, Yun-yan; Shi, Yong-Ying; Zheng, Yong-Xiang; Xiao, Su-Long; Wang, Han; Huang, Xiaoxi; Zhu, Linyi; Chen, Kunbo; Zhao, Chuanke; Zhang, Chuanling; Yu, Maorong; Sun, Dian; Zhang, Lihe; Zhou, Demin (2013). "Development of Oleanane-Type Triterpenes as a New Class of HCV Entry Inhibitors". Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. 56 (11): 130510090711006. doi:10.1021/jm301910a. PMID 23662817.