Holly plants yield heart-protecting compounds that scientists have now mapped
Wang Q, Yao D.
Medicinal Plants
Kuding tea, brewed from leaves of several Ilex species and sold in Asian grocery stores and specialty herb shops worldwide, turns out to contain a surprisingly rich cocktail of compounds now being studied as drug leads for heart disease and inflammation.
Holly plants, which most people know only as Christmas decorations, include hundreds of species that have been used as medicine and tea in Asia for generations. Scientists went through the research literature and mapped out exactly which chemical compounds in these plants seem to be doing the healing work. They found that certain molecules, especially a class called triterpenoids, show real promise for protecting the heart and reducing harmful fats in the blood.
Key Findings
Over 600 Ilex species exist; six are especially prominent in traditional Chinese medicine, including kuding tea (Ilex kudingcha) and hairy holly (Ilex pubescens)
Triterpenoids with lactone rings and polyphenolic derivatives were identified as the primary bioactive lead compounds, with documented antioxidant, antithrombotic, anti-inflammatory, and antitumor activities
Specific compound classes show potential as drug leads for lipid reduction and cardiomyocyte (heart cell) protection, establishing a chemical-to-pharmacology correlation map for the genus
chevron_right Technical Summary
Researchers reviewed the full pharmacological profile of Ilex, a genus of roughly 600 plant species used for centuries in traditional medicine across Asia. They found that specific chemical compounds, particularly triterpenoids and polyphenols, are responsible for documented health effects including heart protection, anti-inflammatory action, and cholesterol reduction.
Abstract Preview
Original paper
Revealing the correlation between chemical composition and pharmacological effects of medicinal plants in the Ilex L. genus.
Ilex, a genus of approximately 600 species, holds substantial importance in Traditional Chinese Medicine. Species such as Ilex kudingcha C. J. Tseng, Ilex pubescens, Ilex latifolia Thunb., Ilex cor...
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Kuding is a particularly bitter-tasting Chinese infusion, which due to their similarities in appearance is derived from several plant species. The two most common plants used to make kuding are the wax tree species Ligustrum robustum and the holly species Ilex kaushue, the former being more commo...