Souza Estevão N F, Williamson Elizabeth M, Hawkins Julie A
School of Biological Sciences, University of Reading, Reading, United Kingdom.
School of Pharmacy, University of Reading, Reading, United Kingdom.
Front Plant Sci. 2018 Jun 20;9:834. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2018.00834. eCollection 2018.
Plants are important resources in healthcare and for producing pharmaceutical drugs. Pharmacological and phytochemical characterization contributes to both the safe use of herbal medicines and the identification of leads for drug development. However, there is no recent assessment of the proportion of plants used in ethnomedicine that are characterized in this way. Further, although it is increasingly apparent that plants used in ethnomedicine belong to preferred phylogenetic lineages, it is not known how this relates to the focusing of research effort. Here we identify species and lineages rich in ethnomedicinal use and develop methods to describe how well they are known pharmacologically and/or phytochemically. We find 50% of plant species of the family Leguminosae used in ethnomedicine in Brazil, a geographical area where plants are an important part of healthcare, have been the focus of either phytochemical screening or testing for biological activity. Plant species which have more use reports are studied significantly more often ( < 0.05). Considering the taxonomic distribution of use, 70% of genera that include species with ethnomedicinal use have been studied, compared to 19% of genera with no reported use. Using a novel phylogenetic framework, we show that lineages with significantly greater numbers of ethnomedicinal species are phylogenetically over-dispersed within the family, highlighting the diversity of species used. "Hotnode clades" contain 16% of species but 46% of ethnomedicinally-used species. The ethnomedicinal species in hotnode clades have more use reports per species ( < 0.05), suggesting they are more frequently used. They are also more likely to be characterized pharmacologically and/or phytochemically. Research focus has followed traditional use by these measures, at least for these Brazilian plants, yet ethnomedicinal species yielding candidate drugs, raising public health concerns and more intensively studied lie outside of the hotnode clades.
植物是医疗保健和生产药物的重要资源。药理学和植物化学特征有助于草药的安全使用以及药物开发线索的识别。然而,目前尚无对以这种方式表征的民族医学中使用的植物比例的最新评估。此外,尽管越来越明显的是,民族医学中使用的植物属于优先的系统发育谱系,但尚不清楚这与研究工作的重点有何关系。在这里,我们识别出民族药用丰富的物种和谱系,并开发方法来描述它们在药理学和/或植物化学方面的了解程度。我们发现,在巴西这个植物是医疗保健重要组成部分的地理区域,豆科植物中有50%用于民族医学的植物物种已成为植物化学筛选或生物活性测试的重点。使用报告更多的植物物种被研究的频率明显更高(<0.05)。考虑到使用的分类学分布,包括有民族药用物种的属中有70%已被研究,而没有报告使用的属中这一比例为19%。使用一个新颖的系统发育框架,我们表明,民族药用物种数量明显更多的谱系在该科内系统发育上过度分散,突出了所使用物种的多样性。“热点分支”包含16%的物种,但占民族药用物种的46%。热点分支中的民族药用物种每个物种的使用报告更多(<0.05),表明它们更常被使用。它们也更有可能在药理学和/或植物化学方面得到表征。至少对于这些巴西植物来说,研究重点遵循了传统用途,但产生候选药物、引发公共卫生关注且研究更深入的民族药用物种却不在热点分支之内。