ABSTRACT
Ficus genus is typically tropical plants and is among the earliest fruit trees cultivated by humans. Ficus carica L. is the common fig, Ficus benjamina L. is the weeping fig, and Ficus pumila L. is the creeping fig. These species are commonly used in traditional medicine for a wide range of diseases and contain rich secondary metabolites that have shown diverse applications. This comprehensive review describes for Ficus genus the phytochemical compounds, traditional uses and contemporary pharmacological activities such as antioxidant, cytotoxic, antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, antidiabetic, antiulcer, and anticonvulsant. An extended survey of the current literature (Science Direct, Scopus, PubMed) has been carried out as part of the current work. The trends in the phytochemistry, pharmacological mechanisms and activities of Ficus genus are overviewed in this manuscript: antimicrobial, antidiabetic, anti-inflammatory and analgesic activity, antiseizure and anti-Parkinson's diseases, cytotoxic and antioxidant. Health-promoting effects, recent human clinical studies, safety and adverse effects of Ficus plants also are covered. The medical potential and long-term pharmacotherapeutic use of the genus Ficus along with no serious reported adverse events, suggests that it can be considered as being safe.
Subject(s)
Ficus/chemistry , Phytochemicals/therapeutic use , Plant Extracts/therapeutic use , Humans , Phytochemicals/pharmacology , Plant Extracts/pharmacologyABSTRACT
The inhibitory effects of essential oils as well as chloroformic extracts of Thymus vulgaris, Thymus serpyllum, Salvia officinalis and Pimpinella anisum grown in Ash-shoubak region-south of Jordan and their possible individual phytochemical constituents was screened against pathogenic clinical and standard strains of Staphylococcus aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Escherichia coli. The bioassay employed was the agar well diffusion method. The essential oils and chloroformic extracts of T. vulgaris and T. serpyllum were the most effective against the tested strains of bacteria. Clinical and standard strains of S .aureus and P. aeruginosa were uninhibited by S. officinalis essential oils. P. aeruginosa tested strains were also resistant to P. anisum essential oils. For almost all bacterial strains, the highest antibacterial effect of oils was obtained with the highest tested dose (15 µl). Chlorformic extracts of S. officinalis showed small activity against standard and clinical E. coli strains and were not effective to inhibit strains of P. aeruginosa and S. aureus. Chloroformic extracts obtained from P. anisum and applied at 300 µg/cm(2) slightly inhibited E. coli, but moderately inhibited S. aureus. It is shown from the results that the antibacterial effects of the individual components varied depending upon their chemical structure, functional groups and configuration as well as doses used. This study showed the beneficial effects of the essential oils of T. serpyllum and T. vulgaris grown in Ash-shoubak in inhibiting the growth of microbes and the implications this could have in pharmacy and food technology.
Subject(s)
Anti-Infective Agents/pharmacology , Disk Diffusion Antimicrobial Tests/statistics & numerical data , Oils, Volatile/pharmacology , Plant Extracts/pharmacology , Plants, Medicinal/chemistry , Anti-Infective Agents/chemistry , Disk Diffusion Antimicrobial Tests/methods , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Jordan , Oils, Volatile/chemistry , Pimpinella/chemistry , Plant Extracts/chemistry , Salvia officinalis/chemistry , Thymus Plant/chemistryABSTRACT
In Jordan, Salvia ceratophylla L. is traditionally used in the treatment of cancer, microbial infections, and urinary disorders. This study aimed: (1) to chemically characterize S. ceratophylla essential oil (EO) from South Jordan, by gas chromatography (GC) and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS); and (2) to evaluate in vitro the cytotoxic, anti-inflammatory, and antiprotozoal activities of the EO, it's predominant components, and the hexane (A), ethyl acetate (B), methanol (C) and crude-methanol extracts (D). The analysis revealed that the EO has 71 compounds, with linalool (54.8%) as main constituent. Only the hexane extract (A) showed some cytotoxic activity against SK-MEL, KB, BT-549, SK-OV-3, LLC-PK1 and VERO cells lines with IC50 between 60 and > 100 µg/mL. The EO inhibited NO production (IC50 90 µg/mL) and NF-κB activity (IC50 38 µg/mL). The extracts A, B, and D inhibited NO production and NF- κB activity with IC50 between 32 and 150 µg/mL. Linalool considerably inhibited NO production (IC50 18 µg/mL). The extracts tested did not exhibit antileishmanial activity. Regarding antitrypanosomal activity, the EO exhibited significant results with IC50 2.65 µg/mL. In conclusion, Jordan S. ceratophylla EO represents a rich source of linalool and bears a promising therapeutic potential for further antitrypanosomal drug development.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Practices of biopiracy to use genetic resources and indigenous knowledge by Western companies without benefit-sharing of those, who generated the traditional knowledge, can be understood as form of neocolonialism. HYPOTHESIS: The One-World Medicine concept attempts to merge the best of traditional medicine from developing countries and conventional Western medicine for the sake of patients around the globe. STUDY DESIGN: Based on literature searches in several databases, a concept paper has been written. Legislative initiatives of the United Nations culminated in the Nagoya protocol aim to protect traditional knowledge and regulate benefit-sharing with indigenous communities. The European community adopted the Nagoya protocol, and the corresponding regulations will be implemented into national legislation among the member states. Despite pleasing progress, infrastructural problems of the health care systems in developing countries still remain. Current approaches to secure primary health care offer only fragmentary solutions at best. Conventional medicine from industrialized countries cannot be afforded by the impoverished population in the Third World. Confronted with exploding costs, even health systems in Western countries are endangered to burst. Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) is popular among the general public in industrialized countries, although the efficacy is not sufficiently proven according to the standards of evidence-based medicine. CAM is often available without prescription as over-the-counter products with non-calculated risks concerning erroneous self-medication and safety/toxicity issues. The concept of integrative medicine attempts to combine holistic CAM approaches with evidence-based principles of conventional medicine. CONCLUSION: To realize the concept of One-World Medicine, a number of standards have to be set to assure safety, efficacy and applicability of traditional medicine, e.g. sustainable production and quality control of herbal products, performance of placebo-controlled, double-blind, randomized clinical trials, phytovigilance, as well as education of health professionals and patients.
Subject(s)
International Cooperation , Medicine, Traditional , Plants, Medicinal , Theft , Biodiversity , Colonialism , Complementary Therapies , Developing Countries , Double-Blind Method , European Union , Evidence-Based Medicine , Humans , Medicine, Traditional/standards , Naturopathy , Patents as Topic , Quality Control , Self MedicationABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Monoamine oxidases (MAOs) are outer mitochondrial membrane flavoenzymes. They catalyze the oxidative deamination of a variety of neurotransmitters. MAO-A and MAO-B may be considered as targets for inhibitors to treat neurodegenerative diseases and depression and for managing symptoms associated with Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases. PURPOSE: The objective was to evaluate the inhibitory effect of Hypericum afrum and Cytisus villosus against MAO-A and B and to isolate the compounds responsible for the MAO-inhibitory activity. METHODS: The inhibitory effect of extracts and purified constituents of H. afrum and C. villosus were investigated in vitro using recombinant human MAO-A and B, and through bioassay-guided fractionation of ethyl acetate fractions of areal parts of the two plants collected in northeastern Algeria. In addition, computational protein-ligand docking and molecular dynamics simulations were carried out to explain the MAO binding at the molecular level. RESULTS: The ethyl acetate (EtOAc) fractions of H. afrum and C. villosus showed the highest MAO inhibition activity against MAO A and B with IC50 values of 3.37⯵g/ml and 13.50⯵g/ml as well as 5.62 and 1.87⯵g/ml, respectively. Bioassay-guided fractionation of the EtOAc fractions resulted in the purification and identification of the known flavonoids quercetin, myricetin, genistein and chrysin as the principal MAO-inhibitory constituents. Their structures were established by extensive 1 and 2D NMR studies and mass spectrometry. Quercetin, myricetin and chrysin showed potent inhibitory activity towards MAO-A with IC50 values of 1.52, 9.93 and 0.25 µM, respectively, while genistein more efficiently inhibited MAO-B (IC50 value: 0.65 µM). The kinetics of the inhibition and the study of dialysis dissociation of the complex of quercetin and myricetin and the isoenzyme MAO-A showed competitive and mixed inhibition, respectively. Both compounds showed reversible binding. Molecular docking experiments and molecular dynamics simulations allowed to estimate the binding poses and to identify the most important residues involved in the selective recognition of molecules in the MAOs enzymatic clefts. CONCLUSION: Quercetin and myricetin isolated from H. afrum together with genistein and chrysin isolated from C. villosus have been identified as potent MAO-A and -B inhibitors. H. afrum and C. villosus have properties indicative of potential neuroprotective ability and may be new candidates for selective MAO-A and B inhibitors.