Skip to main content
Cell Stress & Chaperones logoLink to Cell Stress & Chaperones
. 1999 Sep;4(3):171–176. doi: 10.1379/1466-1268(1999)004<0171:mye>2.3.co;2

Medicinal yeast extracts

Donna J Schlemm 1, Maria J Crowe 2, Redmond B McNeill 3, Anne E Stanley 4, Stephen J Keller 5
PMCID: PMC312931  PMID: 10547066

Abstract

Alcoholic extracts of bakers' yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) have been used for over 60 years in over-the-counter medications for the treatment of hemorrhoids, burns, and wounds. Although previous studies suggested that small peptides were responsible for the medical observations, the peptides were never resolved into separate fractions and identified. In the present report, a protein fraction was prepared by RPC18 chromatography of the extract which enhances wound closure in both diabetic and non-diabetic littermates. The peptides are active in nanomolar amounts and are 600 times more active than the initial extract. SDS-PAGE and N-terminal amino acid sequencing identified 4 polypeptides in the extract. Three of the proteins were small molecular weight stress-associated proteins: copper, zinc superoxide-dismutase, ubiquitin, and glucose lipid regulated protein (HSP 12). The fourth protein, acyl-CoA binding protein II, has not been previously associated with stress proteins.

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (583.1 KB).


Articles from Cell Stress & Chaperones are provided here courtesy of Elsevier

RESOURCES