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Vol. 294, Issue 3, 822-829, September 2000
Department of Preventive Medicine, Division of Social Medicine,
Medical Research Institute, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, Tokyo,
Japan
Berberine is an isoquinoline alkaloid with multiple pharmacological
actions, including anti-inflammatory activity. The aims of this study
were to examine the effect of berberine on the mucosal healing process
and to investigate whether berberine can inhibit the increased
production of interleukin-8 in trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid-induced
colitis in rats. Berberine was administered orally for 3 days or 1 week
at a dosage of 7.5 or 15 mg/kg/day. Tissue damage scores, body weight,
colon wet weight, and colon wall thickness were measured, and
myeloperoxidase activity in colon tissue was also examined.
Histological lesions, morphological damage, and myeloperoxidase
activity were reduced after 1 week of treatment with berberine at a
dosage of 15 mg/kg/day. Furthermore, 1 week after trinitrobenzene
sulfonic acid treatment, the production of interleukin-8 by cultured
rectal mucosa or cardiac blood mononuclear cells with or without
stimulation of lipopolysaccharide for 24 h was also analyzed by
enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Cardiac blood mononuclear cells and
rectal mucosa of normal rats produced substantial amounts of
interleukin-8, which increased strikingly with the stimulation of
lipopolysaccharide. Cardiac blood mononuclear cells and rectal mucosa
of trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid-treated rats secreted more
interleukin-8 than those of normal rats. The addition of berberine with
a concentration of 10
5 M to the culture media resulted in
an inhibition of interleukin-8 production of rectal mucosa.