Chrysanthemin

Chrysanthemin is a lipid of Polyketides (PK) class. Chrysanthemin is associated with abnormalities such as Dehydration, Endothelial dysfunction, Cardiovascular Diseases, Obesity and Hyperglycemia. The involved functions are known as inhibitors, Process, Pigment, Inflammation and Transcription, Genetic. Chrysanthemin often locates in Membrane, Back, Vacuole, vacuolar membrane and vacuolar lumen. The related lipids are Butanols.

Cross Reference

Introduction

To understand associated biological information of Chrysanthemin, we collected biological information of abnormalities, associated pathways, cellular/molecular locations, biological functions, related genes/proteins, lipids and common seen animal/experimental models with organized paragraphs from literatures.

What diseases are associated with Chrysanthemin?

Chrysanthemin is suspected in Cardiovascular Diseases, Obesity, Dehydration, Endothelial dysfunction, Hyperglycemia and other diseases in descending order of the highest number of associated sentences.

Related references are mostly published in these journals:

Disease Cross reference Weighted score Related literature
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No disease MeSH terms mapped to the current reference collection.

PubChem Associated disorders and diseases

What pathways are associated with Chrysanthemin

There are no associated biomedical information in the current reference collection.

PubChem Biomolecular Interactions and Pathways

Link to PubChem Biomolecular Interactions and Pathways

What cellular locations are associated with Chrysanthemin?

Related references are published most in these journals:

Location Cross reference Weighted score Related literatures
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What functions are associated with Chrysanthemin?


Related references are published most in these journals:

Function Cross reference Weighted score Related literatures

What lipids are associated with Chrysanthemin?

Related references are published most in these journals:

Lipid concept Cross reference Weighted score Related literatures
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What genes are associated with Chrysanthemin?

There are no associated biomedical information in the current reference collection.

What common seen animal models are associated with Chrysanthemin?

There are no associated biomedical information in the current reference collection.

NCBI Entrez Crosslinks

All references with Chrysanthemin

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Authors Title Published Journal PubMed Link
Hecht SS et al. Identification of cyanidin glycosides as constituents of freeze-dried black raspberries which inhibit anti-benzo[a]pyrene-7,8-diol-9,10-epoxide induced NFkappaB and AP-1 activity. 2006 Carcinogenesis pmid:16522666
Esselen M et al. Anthocyanins suppress the cleavable complex formation by irinotecan and diminish its DNA-strand-breaking activity in the colon of Wistar rats. 2013 Carcinogenesis pmid:23275152
Yan X et al. Cyanidin-3-O-glucoside Induces Apoptosis and Inhibits Migration of Tumor Necrosis Factor-α-Treated Rat Aortic Smooth Muscle Cells. 2016 Cardiovasc. Toxicol. pmid:26138096
Acquaviva R et al. Cyanidin and cyanidin 3-O-beta-D -glucoside as DNA cleavage protectors and antioxidants. 2003 Cell Biol. Toxicol. pmid:14686616
Bonarska-Kujawa D et al. Interaction of selected anthocyanins with erythrocytes and liposome membranes. 2012 Cell. Mol. Biol. Lett. pmid:22396139
Chen PN et al. Black rice anthocyanins inhibit cancer cells invasion via repressions of MMPs and u-PA expression. 2006 Chem. Biol. Interact. pmid:16970933
Serra D et al. Anti-inflammatory protection afforded by cyanidin-3-glucoside and resveratrol in human intestinal cells via Nrf2 and PPAR-γ: Comparison with 5-aminosalicylic acid. 2016 Chem. Biol. Interact. pmid:27818126
Zhang Q et al. A gram scale synthesis of a multi-13C-labelled anthocyanin, [6,8,10,3',5'-13C5]cyanidin-3-glucoside, for use in oral tracer studies in humans. 2011 Chem. Commun. (Camb.) pmid:21892498
Wang D et al. Gut microbiota metabolism of anthocyanin promotes reverse cholesterol transport in mice via repressing miRNA-10b. 2012 Circ. Res. pmid:22821931
Hazen SL and Smith JD An antiatherosclerotic signaling cascade involving intestinal microbiota, microRNA-10b, and ABCA1/ABCG1-mediated reverse cholesterol transport. 2012 Circ. Res. pmid:23023503