School of Biological Sciences, College of Biological and Physical Sciences, University of Nairobi, PO Box 30197-00100, Nairobi, Kenya.
J Ethnopharmacol. 2013 Mar 27;146(2):557-61. doi: 10.1016/j.jep.2013.01.023. Epub 2013 Jan 29.
Malaria continues to kill over a million people each year and in many populations affected by malaria, conventional drugs are often unaffordable or inaccessible. Historically, plants have been a prominent source of antimalarial drugs. Those plants currently used by indigenous people to treat malaria should be documented and investigated as potential sources of new antimalarial drugs.
To investigate in vivo antimalarial activity, toxicity and carry out phytochemical screening of selected plants which have been used in traditional medicine for the treatment of malaria.
Organic and water extracts of four medicinal plants used for the treatment of malaria in traditional health systems of Msambweni people in Kenya were tested for antimalarial activity against Plasmodium berghei and brine shrimp lethality. They were also screened for their major phytochemical constituents.
Aqueous extract of the stem bark of Adansonia digitata exhibited highest chemosuppression of parasitaemia, >60% in a murine model of Plasmodium berghei infected mice. Aqueous and organic extracts of Launaea cornuta and Zanthoxylum chalybeum were toxic to the brine shrimp (LD50<1000μg/ml) while aqueous and organic extracts of Adansonia digitata and aqueous extracts of Canthium glaucum were not toxic to brine shrimp (LD50>1000μg/ml). Phytochemical screening revealed the presence of alkaloids and flavonoids in all the crude extracts of the selected plant species studied. Sesquiterpene lactones and saponis were present in organic extracts but absent in the aqueous extracts of Adansonia digitata, Canthium glaucum, Launaea cornuta and Zanthoxylum chalybeum.
The results showed that the crude extracts of Adansonia digitata and Canthium glaucum demonstrated promising antimalarial activity and there is potential for isolation of lead compounds from their extracts.
疟疾每年仍导致超过 100 万人死亡,在许多受疟疾影响的人群中,常规药物往往负担不起或无法获得。历史上,植物一直是抗疟药物的主要来源。那些目前被土著人民用于治疗疟疾的植物应该被记录下来并进行研究,以作为新的抗疟药物的潜在来源。
研究四种在肯尼亚姆桑布韦传统医疗体系中用于治疗疟疾的药用植物的体内抗疟活性、毒性,并进行植物化学筛选。
对用于治疗疟疾的肯尼亚姆桑布韦传统医疗体系中的四种药用植物的有机和水提取物进行了抗疟活性测试,以检测其对伯氏疟原虫的活性,并进行了卤虫致死毒性测试。还对它们的主要植物化学成分进行了筛选。
乳木果的茎皮水提取物在伯氏疟原虫感染小鼠的鼠模型中表现出最高的寄生虫抑制率,>60%。Launaea cornuta 和 Zanthoxylum chalybeum 的水和有机提取物对卤虫有毒(LD50<1000μg/ml),而 Adansonia digitata 的水和有机提取物和 Canthium glaucum 的水提取物对卤虫无毒(LD50>1000μg/ml)。植物化学筛选显示,在所研究的选定植物物种的所有粗提物中均存在生物碱和类黄酮。倍半萜内酯和皂苷存在于有机提取物中,但不存在于 Adansonia digitata、Canthium glaucum、Launaea cornuta 和 Zanthoxylum chalybeum 的水提取物中。
结果表明,乳木果和坎替姆的粗提取物表现出有希望的抗疟活性,并且有可能从它们的提取物中分离出先导化合物。