Browsing by Subject "cytotoxicity"
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- ItemOpen AccessAntimycobacterial, Cytotoxic, and Antioxidant Activities of Abietane Diterpenoids Isolated from Plectranthus madagascariensis(2021-01-19) Ndjoubi, Kadidiatou O; Sharma, Rajan; Badmus, Jelili A; Jacobs, Ayesha; Jordaan, Audrey; Marnewick, Jeanine; Warner, Digby F; Hussein, Ahmed AMedicinal plants of the Plectranthus genus (Lamiaceae) are well known for their ethnomedicinal applications. Plectranthus madagascariensis, which is native to South Africa, is traditionally used in the treatment of respiratory conditions, scabies, and cutaneous wounds. The phytochemical studies of P. madagascariensis led to the isolation of five known royleanone abietanes, namely, 6β,7α-dihydroxyroyleanone (1), 7α-acetoxy-6β-hydroxyroyleanone (2), horminone (3), coleon U quinone (4), and carnosolon (5). The relative configuration of compound 2 was established by X-ray analysis. Compounds 1–4 showed antimycobacterial activity (Minimum inhibitory concentration for 90% inhibition, MIC90 = 5.61–179.60 μM) against Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv. Compound 4 and 5 showed comparable toxicity (Concentration for 50% inhibition, IC50 98.49 μM and 79.77 μM) to tamoxifen (IC50 22.00 μg/mL) against HaCaT cells. Compounds 1–5 showed antioxidant activity through single-electron transfer (SET) and/or hydrogen-atom transfer (HAT) with compound 5 being the most active antioxidant agent. Compounds 3 and 5 were isolated for the first time from P. madagascariensis. The observed results suggest P. madagascariensis as an important ethnomedicinal plant and as a promising source of diterpenoids with potential use in the treatment of tuberculosis and psoriasis.
- ItemOpen AccessStudies on in vitro antiplasmodial activity of cleome rutidosperma(2010) Bose, Anindya; Lategan, Carmen Abriette; Smith, Peter J; Gupta, Jayanta KumarMalaria is a protozoal disease transmitted by the Anopheles mosquito, caused by minute parasitic protozoa of the genus Plasmodium, which infect human and insect hosts alternatively. It affects over 40% of the worldís population, with 120 million cases reported, and about 2 million deaths annually (1). The P. falciparum variety of the parasite accounts for 80% of cases and 90% of deaths caused by malaria. The declining efficacy of classical medication in relation to the rapid increase of parasite resistant strains, mainly of Plasmodium falciparum, as well as the greater resistance of vectors to insecticides, and the difficulty of creating efficient vaccines have led to an urgent need for new efficient antimalarial drugs (2, 3). Natural molecules may provide innovative strategies towards malarial control, hence active research groups are now working to develop new active compounds as an alternative to chloroquine, especially from artemisinin (4, 5), a plant-based antimalaria drug isolated from the Chinese plant Artemisia annua (6). Plants may well, therefore, prove to be the sources of new antimalarial in view of the success with the two important chemotherapeutic agents, quinine and artemisinin, both of which are derived from plants. Cleome rutidosperma (Capparidaceae) is a low-growing herb, up to 70 cm tall, found in waste grounds and grassy places with trifoliate leaves and small, violet-blue flowers, which turn pink as they age. The elongated capsules display the asymmetrical, dull black seeds. The plant is native to West Africa, although it has become naturalized in various parts of tropical America as well as Southeast Asia (7, 8). The diuretic, laxative, anthelmintic, antimicrobial, analgesic, anti-inflammatory, antipyretic, antioxidant and free radical scavenging activities of Cleome rutidosperma were reported earlier by the authors (9-13). The plant is used as antimalarial by the traditional healers in Cameroon and mild antiplasmodial activity of chloroform/methanol (1:1) extract of leaves of Cleome rutidosperma against chloroquine-sensitive (F32) laboratory strain of P. falciparum was reported earlier in Cameroon (14). The present study investigates the in vitro antiplasmodial activity of ethanolic extract and its fractions of aerial parts of Cleome rutidosperma against the chloroquine sensitive (CQS) D10 strain of the parasite, as well as their toxicity against a mammalian cell lines.