| Literature DB >> 18955349 |
Ramar Perumal Samy1, Ponnampalam Gopalakrishnakone.
Abstract
The uses of traditional medicinal plants for primary health care have steadily increased worldwide in recent years. Scientists are in search of new phytochemicals that could be developed as useful anti-microbials for treatment of infectious diseases. Currently, out of 80% of pharmaceuticals derived from plants, very few are now being used as anti-microbials. Plants are rich in a wide variety of secondary metabolites that have found anti-microbial properties. This review highlights the current status of traditional medicine, its contribution to modern medicine, recent trends in the evaluation of anti-microbials with a special emphasis upon some tribal medicine, in vitro and in vivo experimental design for screening, and therapeutic efficacy in safety and human clinical trails for commercial outlet. Many of these commercially available compounds are crude preparations administered without performing human clinical trials. Recent methods are useful to standardize the extraction for scientific investigation of new phytochemicals and anti-microbials of traditionally used plants. It is concluded that once the local ethnomedical preparations of traditional sources are scientifically evaluated before dispensing they should replace existing drugs commonly used for the therapeutic treatment of infection. This method should be put into practice for future investigations in the field of ethnopharmacology, phytochemistry, ethnobotany and other biological fields for drug discovery.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18955349 PMCID: PMC2887332 DOI: 10.1093/ecam/nen036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Figure 1.Some of the folk medicinal plants and its various parts used as therapeutic potential in Southern Tamil nadu, Western Ghats of India. (a and c) Seed with flower of Andrographics paniculata Wallichi ex Nees (Acanthaceae), (b) fruit of Strychnos nux-vomica L. (Loganiaceae), (d) Euphorbia hirta L. (Euphorbiaceae), (e) whole plant of Ocimum sanctum L. (Lamiaceae) and (f) inflorescence of Ocimum sanctum L.
Figure 2.Some of the folk medicinal plants and its various parts used as therapeutic potential in Southern Tamil nadu, Western Ghats of India. (a) Cardiospermum halicaccabum L. (Sapindaceae), (b) Aloe vera Mill. (Liliaceae), (c) Vitex negundo L. (Verbenaceae), (d) Phyllanthus amarus (Euphorbiaceae) (e) Cathranthus roseus (L) and (f) Mimosa pudica L. (Mimosaceae).
Some of the traditional medicinal plants and their class of anti-microbial compounds
| Scientific names | Parts/solvents | Class | Compounds | Mechanism of traditional medicine | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Resinous exudate | Diterpenes, | 3-Prenyl- | Argentinian traditional medicine showed activity towards dermatophytes and bacteria (MICs 50,100 and 125 µg/ml). | Feresin | |
| Leaf and flower | Glycosides | Anthraquinone glycosides, anthraquinones, free aglycone | Optimum laxative activity and reduced toxicity. | Abo and Adeyemi ( | |
| Flowers | Flavonoids | Apigenin 7- | Glucuronide showed strong HIV-1 integrase inhibitory activity in a cell culture assay using HIV-IIIIB-infected MT-4 cells. | Lee-Huang | |
| Rhizome | Flavonoids | Curcumin and curminoids | A number of different molecules involved in inflammation that are inhibited by curcumin including lipo-oxygenase, phosphopolipase and elastase. | Chainani-Wu ( | |
| Aerial parts | Essential oil | Carvacrol (68.1%), γ-terpinene (9.9%) and | Anti-fungal activity against | Salgueiro | |
| – | Essential oil | Cineole and camphor, Camphor and 1,8-cineole | Anti-microbial activity (0.5–2% v/v) synergistic effect is presented as a possible explanation for the traditional use for chest pain in South Africa. | Viljoen | |
| Bark | Essential oil monoterpenes | β-Pinene (20.0%), α-pinene (66.6%) | Plant widely used by the traditional healers, anti-microbial activity (MIC 1.11–0.71 µg/ml). | Martins | |
| Ethanol extract | Aporphine alkaloids | Liriodenine, corydine, isocorydine, atherospermidine, stephalagine and dehydrostephalagine | Liriodenine showed strong cytotoxic activity while corydine and atherospermidine showed DNA damaging activity. | Gören | |
| Seed | Alkaloid | Skimmianine | Ugandan plants showed anti-microbial activity by agar well assay and anti-fungal activity. Its mode of action is unclear from these results. | Olila | |
| Whole plant | Alkaloid | Berberine-etrahydroberberine and 8-oxoberberine | Chinese herb-exhibited vasodilator activity has been attributed to multiple cellular mechanisms. And its derivatives are attributed to the blockade of K+ channels [delayed rectifier and K (ATP)] and stimulation of Na+–Ca (2+) exchanger. | Lau | |
| Rhizome | Polyphenolics | 6-,8-,10-gingerol and 6-shogoal | The gingerols inhibit the growth of | Mahady | |
| Gum resin | Pentacyclic triterpenes | Boswellic acids | Boswellic acids inhibit the leukotriene biosynthesis in neutrophilic granulocytes by a non-redox, non-competitive inhibition of 5-lipoxygenase. | Ammon ( | |
| Leaf | Proteins | Lysine | The inhibitor showed | Narwal |
Figure 3.Flow chart for the various sequential protocols involved for the purification, characterization and structural derivation of medicinal plants and their bioactive compounds. Various fractions, i.e. HF: hexane fraction; PEF: petroleum ether fraction; DCM: dichrloromethane fraction; ETA: ethyl acetate fraction; MF: methanol fraction; CHL: chloroform fraction; WA: water and ACE: acetone fraction.
Different types of organic solvents are used for the extraction of active compounds
| Acetone | Chloroform | Diethyl ether | Ethanol | Hexane | Methanol | Petroleum ether | Water |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flavonols ( | Terpenoids ( | Alkaloids, terpenoids, fatty acids ( | Alkaloid ( | Carvacrol ( | Terpenoids, flavonnes, polyphenols, tannins ( | Proanthocyanidin ( | Anthrocyanins ( |
Figure 4.Structure of common anti-microbial compounds from the popularly used traditional medicinal plants.