Verticine (Steroidal Alkaloid · Antitussive · Immunomodulatory)
| Compound | Verticine (Thujifoline; Peimissine precursor) |
| Class | Alkaloid — Steroidal (Cevanine-type) |
| CAS | 18059-10-4 |
| Molecular formula | C₂₇H₄₃NO₃ |
| Primary sources | Fritillaria verticillata, Fritillaria thunbergii, Fritillaria cirrhosa |
| Plant part | Bulbs |
| Claim strength | Moderate |
| Key applications | Antitussive; anti-inflammatory; immunomodulatory; pulmonary health |
| Buy from Herbuno | Availability on request — request bulk pricing → |
Name origin: Verticine is named after Fritillaria verticillata, though it also occurs in F. thunbergii (Zhe Bei Mu) and F. cirrhosa (Chuan Bei Mu). It is closely related to imperialine — sharing the cevanine steroidal skeleton — but carries an additional hydroxyl group at C-3, making it more polar. The compound is also sometimes called thujifoline in older literature. Traditional use: Verticine is a constituent of Bei Mu (Fritillaria bulb) preparations with the same traditional respiratory applications as imperialine-containing species — antitussive, expectorant, and anti-inflammatory for cough, bronchitis, and pulmonary conditions. Chuan Bei Mu (F. cirrhosa) in particular, rich in verticine and verticinone, is one of the most prized TCM respiratory herbs for chronic dry cough with deficiency patterns. Research trajectory: Verticine has been studied separately from imperialine to characterise the relative contribution of individual Fritillaria steroidal alkaloids to the antitussive and bronchospasmolytic activity of Bei Mu preparations. It shows complementary rather than identical pharmacological activity to imperialine, supporting the traditional use of whole Fritillaria extract rather than single-compound preparations. Commercial source: Fritillaria steroidal alkaloid preparations including verticine are available on request from Herbuno via specialty TCM botanical supply.
Evidence for Verticine Applications
Antitussive activity: Verticine demonstrates antitussive effects in ammonia vapour and citric acid-induced cough models at doses of 5–30 mg/kg in rodents. The mechanism involves both central suppression of the cough reflex and peripheral bronchial smooth muscle relaxation. Comparative studies suggest verticine's antitussive potency is in the same range as imperialine but with slightly greater central versus peripheral component weighting. Claim strength: Moderate.
Immunomodulatory activity: Verticine modulates macrophage activation and T-lymphocyte proliferation in in vitro immune challenge models. Specifically, it attenuates over-exuberant Th2-skewed immune responses (IL-4, IL-5, IL-13 production) while preserving Th1 activity, a profile potentially beneficial for allergic airway disease. This immunomodulatory profile differentiates verticine from imperialine in the Fritillaria alkaloid portfolio. Claim strength: Emerging.
Anti-inflammatory: COX-2 inhibition, NF-κB pathway suppression, and TGF-β1 modulation in pulmonary fibrosis models have been characterised for verticine. Reduction of pulmonary fibrosis markers in bleomycin-induced rodent models is a notable finding with clinical relevance to interstitial lung disease research. Claim strength: Emerging.
Mucosal secretion modulation: Verticine-containing Fritillaria preparations increase the secretion of respiratory mucus while reducing its viscosity — an expectorant action consistent with TCM Zhe Bei Mu's indication for phlegm-heat cough with thick, difficult-to-expectorate phlegm. This mucokinetic activity complements the antitussive and bronchodilatory effects. Claim strength: Moderate.
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Dosage & Formulator Specification
No isolated verticine human clinical dosing data are established. TCM Fritillaria preparations (Zhe Bei Mu or Chuan Bei Mu) are dosed at 3–9 g dried bulb per day in decoction. Verticine and verticinone combined typically represent 0.05–0.3% of dried Fritillaria bulb weight; their ratio to imperialine varies by species and collection timing.
For commercial supplement formulation, standardised Fritillaria extract with a defined steroidal alkaloid profile (imperialine + verticine + verticinone as primary markers) is the appropriate specification. Chinese Pharmacopoeia standard for total alkaloids in F. thunbergii bulbs is ≥0.080% expressed as peiminine equivalent — a marker that encompasses the verticine family.
Verticine-specific standardisation is available for research-grade preparations. For commercial Bei Mu respiratory formulas, a total steroidal alkaloid content specification (HPLC, minimum 0.1%) covering imperialine, verticine, and verticinone as a group provides quality assurance without requiring individual compound specification at commercial scale.
Formulation compatibility: Fritillaria alkaloids are stable in aqueous systems at neutral pH; degradation is accelerated at pH below 3. Cough syrup formulations at pH 4–5 show moderate stability. Dry extract (tablet, capsule) format provides better shelf stability. TCM traditional formulas pair Fritillaria with Platycodon grandiflorum (platycodin saponins) for synergistic mucokinetic action.
Frequently Asked Questions — Verticine
What is the relationship between verticine and verticinone?
Verticine and verticinone are structurally related cevanine steroidal alkaloids: verticinone is the C-3 ketone oxidation product of verticine (which has a C-3 hydroxyl). They co-occur in F. verticillata and related species; the verticine/verticinone ratio changes during plant maturation and post-harvest processing. Both have antitussive activity; verticinone's ketone group may modestly alter its receptor binding profile relative to verticine.
How does Chuan Bei Mu differ from Zhe Bei Mu in terms of alkaloid profile?
Chuan Bei Mu (F. cirrhosa, F. unibracteata) is relatively enriched in verticine, verticinone, and peimissine — the alkaloid profile associated with its TCM indication for deficiency-pattern dry cough. Zhe Bei Mu (F. thunbergii) is relatively enriched in imperialine and peiminine, consistent with its indication for acute phlegm-heat cough. Both contain all major Fritillaria steroidal alkaloids, but their ratios differ — justifying the TCM differentiation between the two Bei Mu types despite their structural similarity.
Is Fritillaria verticillata commercially available as an extract?
F. verticillata is less widely cultivated than F. thunbergii or F. cirrhosa in the commercial TCM supply chain. Bei Mu extracts in commerce are predominantly from F. thunbergii (Zhe Bei Mu) or F. cirrhosa (Chuan Bei Mu), both of which contain verticine as a constituent. Pure F. verticillata-source extracts are available from specialty TCM botanical suppliers on request.
Can Fritillaria alkaloids be combined with conventional respiratory medications?
TCM tradition extensively combines Bei Mu with other herbs (Platycodon, Fritillaria + Glycyrrhiza formulas like Bei Mu Gua Lou Wan). Conventional drug combination data are limited. Theoretical concern exists for additive anticholinergic effects with ipratropium; additive bronchodilatory effects with theophylline or beta-2 agonists may be beneficial but require professional monitoring. Formulators should note the lack of pharmacokinetic interaction data for Fritillaria alkaloids with contemporary bronchodilators.
Related compounds: Imperialine, Verticinone, Imperialine, Conessine
Claim-strength scale – High = multiple human RCTs; Moderate = limited trials or strong preclinical convergence; Emerging = early-stage lab or animal data.
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