Canna~Fangled Abstracts

2-pentadecyl-2-oxazoline: identification in coffee, synthesis and activity in a rat model of carrageenan-induced hindpaw inflammation.

By April 12, 2016No Comments
2016 Apr 12. pii: S1043-6618(16)30103-7. doi: 10.1016/j.phrs.2016.04.007. [Epub ahead of print]

Abstract

PM 1aN-acylethanolamines (NAEs) comprise a family of bioactive lipid molecules present in animal and plant tissues, with N-palmitoylethanolamine (PEA) having received much attention owing to its anti-inflammatory, analgesic and neuroprotective activities. 2-Pentadecyl-2-oxazoline (PEA-OXA), the oxazoline of PEA, reportedly modulates activity of N-acylethanolamine-hydrolyzing acid amidase (NAAA), which catabolizes PEA. Because PEA is produced on demand and exerts pleiotropic effects on non-neuronal cells implicated in neuroinflammation, modulating the specific amidases for NAEs (NAAA in particular) could be a way to preserve PEA role in maintaining cellular homeostasis through its rapid on-demand synthesis and equally rapid degradation. This study provides the first description of PEA-OXA in both green and roasted coffee beans and Moka infusions, and its synthesis. In an established model of carrageenan (CAR)-induced rat paw inflammation, PEA-OXA was orally active in limiting histological damage and thermal hyperalgesia 6h after CAR intraplantar injection in the right hindpaw and the accumulation of infiltrating inflammatory cells. PEA-OXA appeared to be more potent compared to ultramicronized PEA given orally at the same dose (10mg/kg). PEA-OXA markedly reduced also the increase in hindpaw myeloperoxidase activity, an index of polymorphonuclear cell accumulation in inflammatory tissues. NAAA modulators like PEA-OXA may serve to maximize availability of NAEs (e.g. PEA) while providing for recycling of the NAE components for further resynthesis.
Copyright © 2016. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

KEYWORDS:

N-acylethanolamine; N-palmitoylethanolamine; analgesic; cannabinoids; chemical synthesis; endocannabinoid; fatty acid; neuroinflammation

PMID:

 

27083308

 

[PubMed – as supplied by publisher]
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