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Potent Natural Immunomodulator, Rice Water-Soluble Polysaccharide Fractions with Anticomplementary Activity1

January 2003 Volume 80 Number 1
Pages 5 — 8
Tatsunori Yamagishi , 2 , 3 Takuma Tsuboi , 2 and Koichi Kikuchi 1 , 4

A part of this work was presented at the Annual Meeting of the Japan Society for Bioscience and Biotechnology and Agrochemistry, Tokyo, April 1999. Laboratory of Biochemistry, Department of Biological and Chemical Engineering, Hachinohe National College of Technology, Hachinohe, 039-1192 Japan. Corresponding author. E-mail: yama-c@hachinohe-ct.ac.jp. Present address: Mitsubishi Chemicals Co. Ltd.


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Accepted July 11, 2002.
ABSTRACT

Water-soluble polysaccharide fractions, fractionated with ammonium sulfate from the hot-water-extract of rice bran and endosperm, showed a potent anticomplementary activity. As compared with water-soluble polysaccharide isolated from Angelica acutiloba, which is a well-known medicinal herb, the rice fractions showed similar or higher potency. Protease digestion, periodate oxidation, and hydroxylamine treatments indicated that anticomplementary activity is due to polysaccharide moiety rather than protein moiety and the polyphenol moieties, ferulic acid, being an integral component in rice bran proteoglycan. These results suggest that a water-soluble proteoglycan and a polysaccharide in rice modulate complement activity. This is a new example of natural biological response modifiers in food.



© 2003 American Association of Cereal Chemists, Inc.