Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • allergies (1)
  • biofuel (1)
  • carps (1)
  • CD62P (1)
  • diarrhea (1)
  • goldfish (1)
  • guinea pigs (1)
  • human (2)
  • hydroxyl (1)
  • jatropha (8)
  • mast cell (1)
  • mice (1)
  • oleic acids (2)
  • phorbol esters (5)
  • platelet (1)
  • rats (2)
  • ROS (1)
  • seed (2)
  • toxic (2)
  • toxin (2)
  • UCP3 (1)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    The toxic kernel cake of Jatropha curcas (KCakeJ) is an emerging health and environmental concern. Although phorbol esters are widely recognized as the major toxin of KCakeJ, convincing evidence is absent. Here, we show that rather than phorbol esters an isomeric mixture of 11-hydroxy-9E-octadecenoic acid, 12-hydroxy-10E-octadecenoic acid and 12-hydroxy-10Z-octadecenoic acid (hydroxy-octadecenoic acids, molecular formula C18H34O3) is the major toxic component. The toxicities of hydroxy-octadecenoic acids on experimental animals, e.g. acute lethality, causing inflammation, pulmonary hemorrhage and thrombi, allergies, diarrhea and abortion, are consistent with those on human/animals caused by Jatropha seed and/or KCakeJ. The hydroxyl group and the double bond are essential for hydroxy-octadecenoic acids' toxicity. The main pathway of the toxicity mechanism includes down-regulating UCP3 gene expression, promoting ROS production, thus activating CD62P expression (platelet activation) and mast cell degranulation. The identification of the major toxin of KCakeJ lays a foundation for establishing an environmentally friendly Jatropha biofuel industry.

    Citation

    Xing-Hong Wang, Jie-Qing Liu, Suiyun Chen, Yanfeng Yin, Yan Liu, Changhe Zhang. Hydroxy-octadecenoic acids instead of phorbol esters are responsible for the Jatropha curcas kernel cake's toxicity. Communications biology. 2020 May 08;3(1):228

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags

    Expand section icon Substances


    PMID: 32385384

    View Full Text