Literature DB >> 21528006

Medicinal plants used as antitumor agents in Brazil: an ethnobotanical approach.

Joabe Gomes de Melo1, Ariane Gaspar Santos, Elba Lúcia Cavalcanti de Amorim, Silene Carneiro do Nascimento, Ulysses Paulino de Albuquerque.   

Abstract

WE DESCRIBE THE MEDICINAL PLANTS THAT HAVE BEEN REPORTED TO BE ANTITUMOR AGENTS AND THAT HAVE BEEN USED IN ETHNOBOTANIC RESEARCH IN BRAZIL TO ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS: what is the abundance of plants reported to be antitumor in Brazil? Have the plant species used for tumor treatment in traditional Brazilian medicine been sufficiently examined scientifically? Our analysis included papers published between 1980 and 2008. A total of 84 medicinal plant species were reported to be used for cancer and tumor prevention or treatment; 69.05% of these were cited as being used for the treatment of tumors and cancer in general and 30.95% for specific tumors or cancers. The plants that were cited at a higher frequency were Aloe vera, Euphorbia tirucalli, and Tabebuia impetiginosa. At least, one pharmacological study was found for 35.71% of the species. Majority of the studies selected were conducted in rural communities and urban areas and in areas with traditional healers in Brazil. We found the following molecules to be the most studied in vitro and in vivo: silibinin, β-lapachone, plumbagin and capsaicin. The species addressed here constitute interesting objects for future studies to various professionals in the field of natural products.

Entities:  

Year:  2011        PMID: 21528006      PMCID: PMC3082129          DOI: 10.1155/2011/365359

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Evid Based Complement Alternat Med        ISSN: 1741-427X            Impact factor:   2.629


1. Introduction

In Brazil, it is estimated that there will be more than 489,270 new cases of cancer in 2011 [1]. Also known as neoplastic tumors, malignant tumors are characterized by uncontrolled growth of transformed cells [2], which can rupture the basal membrane, attack and invade the surrounding tissues, and may metastasize [3]. There are some limitations in the treatment of cancer with chemotherapy, that in general provoke various toxic reactions [4]. In addition, solid tumors are generally resistant to chemotherapy due to the inability of the drugs to access hypoxic cells [5]. Moreover, many antineoplastic agents are not specific to cancer cells and can also damage healthy cells, especially those with rapid turnover, such as gastrointestinal and immune cells [2]. Because of this, many patients with cancer around the world have resorted to complementary and alternative therapies as adjuvant treatment in relation to official (radiation, chemotherapy, and surgery), as the use of plants [6]. Plant diversity is an important source of new molecules. More than 60% of the anticancer agents used today are derived directly or indirectly from natural sources [7]. Higher plants have been one of the largest sources of new compounds with pharmacological activity. For example, the species Catharanthus roseus (L.) G. Don (Apocynaceae) produces several alkaloids, two of which, vincristine and vinblastine, have anticancer activity [4]. Taxus brevifolia Nutt., pacific yew, produces a diterpenic alkaloid known as taxol, which has been shown to act against advanced ovarian cancer [8]. β-lapachone and lapachol are extracted from the bark of Tabebuia impetiginosa (Mart. ex DC.) Standl, which is native to Brazil; lapachol is sold in Brazil by Pernambuco Pharmaceutical Laboratory (LAFEPE) and is used for treatment of various neoplasias. Ethnobotanical approach is a strategy that has successfully identified new bioactive molecules from diverse plants. In this approach, the information obtained from traditional communities about the use of medicinal plants is combined with chemical/pharmacological studies performed in laboratories [9]. This strategy has been helpful in plant pharmacological research and has yielded better results than the random approach used in different experimental models [10, 11]. Brazil is the country with the highest plant diversity on the planet, with approximately 55,000 species of higher plants [12] distributed in several ecosystems: Atlantic forest, Amazon Forest, Cerrado, Caatinga, Pantanal, and Pampas. In addition, the country also has an enormous cultural diversity that is reflected in the different ways its natural resources are used [13]. In general, the use of medicinal plants in Brazil is strongly influenced by the cultural miscegenation, the introduction of exotic species by Africans and Europeans since the times of the colonization and the native indigenous people who make use of the local plant diversity. Such immense plant and cultural diversity has favored the diversification of a popular pharmacopoeia based on medicinal plants [14]. This study presents a review of the medicinal plants reported in ethnobotanical studies conducted in Brazil that have antitumor properties. Our results aimed to answer the following two questions: (1) what is the abundance of plants reported to be antitumor properties in Brazil? and (2) have the plant species used for tumor treatment in traditional Brazilian medicine been sufficiently examined scientifically?

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Survey and Study Selection

Our survey of ethnobotanical studies was performed using five databases (SCIELO, SCIRUS, SCOPUS, BIOLOGICAL ABSTRACTS, and WEB OF SCIENCE) using the following four combinations of keywords: ethnobotany AND Brazil AND medicinal plants, ethnobotany AND Brazilian medicinal plants, ethnopharmacology AND Brazil AND medicinal plants, and ethnopharmacology AND Brazilian medicinal plants. Our analysis included papers published between 1980 and 2008. From the studies obtained from our search, we selected only those of an ethnobotanical nature performed in Brazil and that cited at least one plant with popular antitumor properties. All information regarding the plant and its use, such as popular name, species, plant part, therapeutic indication, community type, biome, and location, where the study was carried out, was taken directly from the selected reports. For our analysis, we considered all of the plants as those that were popularly recommended for the treatment of tumors and/or cancer in general or for the treatment of more specific cancers, such as leukemia, warts, or cancers of specific organs or human body parts. Some studies did not specify the culture of the population studied (e.g., indigenous, farmers, quilombola, or urban), and in those cases, we designated it as a “local population.” The Brazilian ecosystems were classified as Amazon, Cerrado (Brazilian savanna), Atlantic forest, Caatinga (tropical dry lands), Pantanal (tropical wetland), and Pampas (South America plain), as defined by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE). In those studies, where the biome type was not provided, the correct biome was obtained from the IBGE, to supplement the data. The frequency or the number of times a given plant species was cited in the different studies analyzed was recorded. Pharmacological studies on the classified plants was verified in the aforementioned databases using the following keyword combinations: species name AND tumor and species name AND cancer. For the species names, all of the scientific synonyms listed in the database of the Missouri Botanical Garden (http://www.tropicos.org/) were used. For the evaluation of the pharmacological studies available for each plant species, we considered both in vitro and in vivo studies related to cancer or tumors in humans and animals.

3. Results

3.1. Survey of Ethnobotanical Studies

Out of 293 studies found using the different keyword combinations, 39 were selected according to the inclusion criteria. Of these selected studies, 89.7% were published between 2000 and 2008. We did not find any studies published during the 1980s. Six bibliographic review papers contained the highest number of plant species cited as antitumor ( = 8.67). Reports considered reviews were those that used data from the published primary literature. The average number of plant species cited, without taking reviews into account, was 2.15. If we took into account all studies including reviews, the average number of species cited was 3.74. The similarity between the plant species cited in the reviews and the primary literature was 29.76%. Majority of the studies were performed in rural communities (farm areas) and urban areas and in areas with traditional healers (>82%). A minority of the studies were performed with indigenous and Quilombola populations. We found that a higher number of plants were cited as being antitumor in the Caatinga (27.38%; 23 spp.), Cerrado (25.0%; 21 spp.) and Atlantic forest (22.6%; 19 spp.), ecosystems. Communities in the Amazon Forest and the Pampas were each represented in 5.61% of the studies, which corresponds to six species. The studies that did not specify the type of vegetation or the location where the study was carried out but that were influenced by two different types of ecosystems corresponded to 20.51% of the studies, representing a total of 41 plant species cited. There was a 14.29% similarity between the species found in two or more ecosystems.

3.2. Survey of Ethnobotanical Studies

A total of 84 medicinal plant species were reported in the ethnobotanical/ethnopharmacological literature as being used for the treatment or prevention of cancer and tumors, and these species were distributed among 42 families and 63 genera (Table 1). The more highly represented botanic families were: Euphorbiaceae (9 spp.), Fabaceae (7 spp.), Apocynaceae (6 spp.), Asteraceae, and Vitaceae (4 spp. each). The genera with the highest number of species were: Cissus (4 spp.), Himatanthus, Maytenus, Cnidoscolus, Euphorbia, Copaifera, Aloe, and Plantago (3 spp. each). The plants most frequently cited were Aloe vera (eight), Aloe arborescens, Euphorbia tirucalli and Tabebuia impetiginosa (each cited six times), and Symphytum officinale (five). Of these, only Tabebuia impetiginosa is native to Brazil.
Table 1

Species of medicinal plants cited as being antitumor by traditional and nontraditional communities in Brazil with their plant parts used, indication, occurrence, and pharmacological studies.

Family/speciesPlant parts used IndicationPharmacological study/molecules evaluatedOccurrence (reference)
Amaranthaceae
Iresine herbstii HookLeafCancer2 [15, 16]
Anacardiaceae
Anacardium occidentale L.ResinWart In vitro, in vivo and clinical/Anacardic acid, polysaccharides, oligosaccharides, β-galactose, and proteins [1720]2 [21, 22]
Myracrodruon urundeuva AllemãoBarkTumors, neoplasias2 [23, 24]
Annonaceae
Rollinia leptopetala R.E. Fr.BarkTumors2 [22, 25]
Rolliniopsis leptopetala (R.E. Fr.) Saff.BarkTumors1 [13]
Apocynaceae
Forsteronia refracta Müll. Arg.LatexCancer In vitro/SL0101 (a kaempferol glycoside) [26]1 [27]
Hancornia speciosa GomesLatexCancer In vitro [28]1 [29]
Himatanthus articulatus (Vahl) WoodsonLatexTumors, cancer1 [22]
Himatanthus bracteatus (A. DC.) WoodsonLatexTumors, cancer1 [22]
Himatanthus obovatus (Müll. Arg.) WoodsonLatexCancer In vitro [30]1 [31]
Macrosiphonia velame (A. St.-Hil.) Müll. Arg.Whole plant, rootTumors1 [31]
Arecaceae
Orbignya phalerata Mart.FruitLeukemia In vitro [32]1 [22]
Asclepiadaceae
Marsdenia altissima (Jacq.) DugandBarkCancer1 [22]
Asteraceae
Acanthospermum hispidum DC.Leaf, flower, rootCancer In vitro and in vivo [33, 34]2 [35, 36]
Aster squamatus (Spreng.) Hieron.Aerial partsCancer2 [15, 37]
Calendula officinalis L.Whole plantCancer In vitro and in vivo/calenduloside F 6′-O-n-butyl-ester and calenduloside G 6′-O-methyl ester [38]1 [15]
Silybum marianum (L.) Gaertn.Internal tumors In vitro and in vivo/silybinin and silimarin [39, 40]1 [16]
Bignoniaceae
Tabebuia impetiginosa (Mart. ex DC.) Standl.Bark, flower, bastCancer and tumors In vitro and in vivo/β-lapachone [41, 42]6 [13, 22, 4346]
Tecoma violacea BarkCancer1 [47]
Boraginaceae
Symphytum officinale L.LeafLeukemia, cancer, mouth cancer, skin cancer In vitro [48]5 [23, 45, 46, 49, 50]
Caricaceae
Carica papaya L.Flower, fruit, latexWart In vitro/5,7-dimethoxycoumarin, Lycopene and Benzyl isothiocyanate [5153]2 [13, 54]
Caryocaraceae
Caryocar coriaceum Wittm.Tumors1 [55]
Cecropiaceae
Cecropia hololeuca Miq.Cancerous wounds1 [56]
Cecropia peltata L.Cancerous wounds1 [56]
 Celastraceae
Maytenus ilicifolia (Schrad.) Planch.Leaf, rootCancer, skin cancer, tumors In vitro/Pristimerin, 6-oxotingenol and Erythrodiol [5759]4 [16, 37, 60, 61]
Maytenus obtusifolia Mart.LeafCancer1 [22]
Maytenus rigida Mart.BarkCancer1 [22]
Chenopodiaceae
Chenopodium ambrosioides L.Stem, leaf, whole plantCancer In vitro and in vivo/ascaridol [62, 63]2 [13, 31]
Cochlospermaceae
Cochlospermum regium (Schrank) Pilg.RootCancer1 [31]
Crassulaceae
Cotyledon orbiculata L.Cancer1 [64]
Euphorbiaceae
Cnidoscolus obtusifolius Pohl ex Baill.Leaf, flowerCancer and tumors3 [13, 35, 36]
Cnidoscolus phyllacanthus (Müll. Arg.) Pax & L. Hoffm.Stem, bark, bast, látex, rootWart2 [13, 21]
Cnidoscolus urens (L.) ArthurRootCancer1 [23]
Croton antisyphiliticus Mart.LeafTumors1 [65]
Croton urucurana Baill.Cancer1 [55]
Euphorbia phosphorea Mart.Stem, latexWart3 [13, 22, 47]
Euphorbia prostrata AitonLatexWart3 [13, 22, 47]
Euphorbia tirucalli L.Latex, aerial parts, leafCancer and wart6 [15, 16, 22, 64, 66, 67]
Manihot esculenta CrantzLeaf, látex, rootWart In vitro/linamarin, esculentoic acids A and B [68, 69]2 [13, 47]
Fabaceae
Anadenanthera colubrina (Vell.) BrenanStem, bark, bast, flower, leaf, fruitCancer In vivo/acidic heteropolysaccharide [70]1 [13]
Bauhinia forficata LinkLeafCancer In vitro/HY52 [71]1 [60]
Copaifera langsdorffii Desf.Tumors In vitro/kaurenoic acid [72]1 [55]
Copaifera multijuga HayneOil of fruitCancer In vitro and in vivo [73]1 [22]
Copaifera reticulata DuckeWhole plantCancer1 [22]
Parapiptadenia rigida (Benth.) BrenanTumors1 [50]
Senna occidentalis (L.) LinkLeaf, seed, rootCancer In vitro [74]2 [13, 36]
Iridaceae
Eleutherine bulbosa (Mill.) Urb.Leaf, bulbCancer1 [67]
Lamiaceae
Leucas martinicensis (Jacq.) R. Br.LeafBenign tumors1 [75]
Lecythidaceae
Cariniana rubra Gardner ex MiersBarkTumors (myoma)1 [61]
Liliaceae
Aloe arborescens Mill.LeafCancer, prostate cancer In vitro, in vivo and clinical/Aloin [7678]6 [15, 16, 64, 66, 79, 80]
Aloe soccotrina DC.LeafLeukemia2 [22, 81]
Aloe vera (L.) Burm. f.Leaf, root, stem and sapCancer In vitro and in vivo/aloe-emodin and aloctin I [82, 83]8 [13, 16, 23, 31, 55, 60, 84, 85]
Lythraceae
Lafoensia pacari A. St.-Hil.BarkCancer1 [61]
Malvaceae
Abutilon grandifolium (Willd.) SweetLeafCancer and myoma2 [16, 79]
Myrcinaceae
Rapanea guianensis Aubl.Branches with leafTumors In vitro/rapanone [86]1 [87]
Rapanea umbellata (Mart.) MezBranches with leafTumors1 [87]
Myrtaceae
Myrciaria herbacea O. BergRootCancer1 [31]
Nyctaginaceae
Boerhavia diffusa L.Leaf, rootLeukemia In vivo/punarnavine, boeravinones G and H [88, 89]1 [31]
Guapira pernambucensis (Casar.) LundellBarkWart1 [22]
Papaveraceae
Chelidonium majus L.LatexWart In vitro and in vivo/chelidonine, sanguinarine, chelerythrine, and nucleases (CMN1 and CMN2) [9092]1 [15]
Piperaceae
Ottonia leptostachya KunthWhole plantWart1 [22]
Piper regnellii (Miq.) C. DC.Leaf, aerial partsMyoma1 [37]
Plantaginaceae
Plantago australis LamLeaf, root, whole plant, and inflorescenceTumors, cancer and prevent cancer3 [37, 50, 79]
Plantago major L.Leaf, root, whole plant and inflorescencePrevent cancer In vitro and in vivo [93, 94]1 [79]
Plantago tomentosa Lam.Cancer2 [16, 37]
Plumbaginaceae
Plumbago scandens L.Bark, leaf, root, whole plantWart In vivo and in vitro/plumbagin [95, 96]4 [13, 21, 22, 25]
Pteridaceae
Adiantum raddianum C. PreslAerial partsCancer2 [37, 64]
Rubiaceae
Psychotria ipecacuanha (Brot.) StokesWhole plantCancer In vitro and in vivo/emetine [97, 98]1 [23]
Sapindaceae
Cardiospermum oliveirae FerrucciStem, leaf, flower, aerial partsTumors3 [13, 22, 36]
Serjania erecta Radlk.Leaf, rootCancer1 [61]
Simaroubaceae
Simaba suffruticosa Engl.RootCancer1 [31]
Solanaceae
Capsicum frutescens L.LeafTumor In vitro and in vivo/capsaicin [99, 100]1 [60]
Solanum americanum Mill.LeafMyoma In vitro and in vivo/glycoprotein and solanine [101, 102]1 [60]
Solanum paniculatum L.Root, leaf, fruitInternal tumors1 [87]
Tiliaceae
Luehea paniculata Mart.Bark, leafTumors1 [103]
Turneraceae
Turnera ulmifolia L.Leaf, root, whole plantCancer1 [13]
Verbenaceae
Stachytarpheta cayennensis (Rich.) VahlLeafCancer2 [37, 64]
Vitex triflora VahlLeaf, latexWart2 [22, 104]
Violaceae
Viola odorata L.Cancer In vitro and in vivo/cycloviolacin O2 [105]1 [64]
Vitaceae
Cissus coccinea (Baker) Mart. ex Planch.Leaf, rootWart1 [22]
Cissus decidua LombardiStem, leaf, flower, aerial partsCancer3 [13, 22, 36]
Cissus duarteana Cambess.Sap and rootWart1 [103]
Cissus erosa Rich.Aerial partsWart2 [21, 22]
Zingiberaceae
Costus spiralis (Jacq.) RoscoeProstate cancer1 [84]
Majority of the plant species were reported to be used for the treatment of tumors and cancer in general (69.05%), and a smaller proportion (30.95%) were reported to be used for the treatment of specific tumors, such as warts, leukemia, myoma, or cancers of the mouth, skin, and prostate. S. officinale stands out from the other plants because it was reported to be used for the treatment of cancer in general, leukemia and mouth and skin cancers. In vitro and in vivo studies related directly to tumors of animal origin were not found for 55 (64.29%) of the species analyzed here.

3.3. Survey of Ethnobotanical Studies

We found at least one type of pharmacological study for 35.71% of the plant species (30 taxa). Considering only the plant species for which we found pharmacological studies, we found only 14.29% (4 taxa) of the species or their molecules were used for clinical studies, and 39.39% of the plants (12 taxa) were used to perform in vitro studies of their extracts or associated molecules (Figure 1). From the plants for which we found studies, approximately 30 molecules with in vitro and/or in vivo antitumor activity have been isolated (Figures 2 and 3).
Figure 1

Level of pharmacological studies related to tumors of medicinal plants cited as being antitumor by traditional and nontraditional communities in Brazil.

Figure 2

Molecules isolated from medicinal plants with antitumor activity in vitro.

Figure 3

Molecules isolated from medicinal plants with antitumor activity in vivo.

Molecules or extracts that exhibited antitumor activity mainly act by inducing cell cycle arrest and/or apoptosis. Preclinical studies in cancer research have focused on the search for molecules that exhibit proapoptotic activity and promote cell cycle arrest. In our analysis, we found a great diversity of molecules of different chemical classes that exhibited anticancer activity, including alkaloids, peptides, glycoproteins, carotenoids, terpenes, carbohydrates, quinines, and phenolic compounds. We summarize, in Table 1, the studies on the antitumor activity of each of the plant species we found in our search and the molecules that have been isolated from them.

4. Discussion

4.1. Survey of Ethnobotanical Studies

The highest numbers of studies citing antitumor plants were published between 2000 and 2008. This pattern is likely associated with the increase of publications relating to ethnobotanical studies conducted in Brazil during this time [106]. The low numbers of citations of plants identified as antitumor, with an overall average below 3 species per article, depicts in general, that local communities have a small repertoire of plants for the treatment of tumors when compared to more recurrent diseases and disorders, such as inflammation, flu, infections and parasites, which is focused on the most assiduous diseases. In a survey of the medicinal plants known and used by the people of the Caatinga biome, Albuquerque et al. [13] documented a total of 389 species, of which more than half were used to treat diseases of the digestive, respiratory, and genitourinary systems, while only 8 species (2%) were used to treat tumors. However, it is difficult to diagnose cancer using traditional medicine because the signs and symptoms of different types of cancer are not specific and are confused with those of other diseases. Most of the selected studies were conducted in urban and farming areas and areas with traditional healers, probably because: (a) these populations have a greater number of studies in Brazil (see [106]), (b) these populations have a greater knowledge of the plants used to treat tumors, and (c) these populations are more susceptible to the influences of other cultures and other external sources, such as the media (similar to what happened to the wide dissemination of Red Lapacho (Tabebuia impetiginosa, by magazine O'Cruzeiro published in 1967 reports of miraculous healing in cancer patients)) [107] and the public markets (defined as public spaces where many types of products are sold, including medicinal plants and their derivatives, and as a forum for the exchange of cultural information) [23]. The low similarity between the plant species from the populations located in the different ecosystems (14.29%) suggests that the populations have a greater knowledge of medicinal plants from the local flora for the treatment of tumors.

4.2. Survey of Ethnobotanical Studies

Our survey of the 84 species of plants used in Brazil for the treatment of tumors likely represents only a fraction of the plants used for this purpose because studies published in local or regional journals may not be indexed in national and/or international databases. Additionally, not all communities in Brazil have been sufficiently studied. The Euphorbiaceae, Fabaceae, Apocynaceae, and Asteraceae families, which had the largest number of species represented in this study, were also the most represented in an ethnopharmacological study aimed at selecting plants for use in experimental studies; one of the criteria for species selection was they present categories of use predefined, among those cited for the treatment of cancers, tumors, ulcers, sore mouth, and throat [4]. Four plant species should be highlighted for being highly cited in the studies and for their greater presence in the different ecosystems and regions of Brazil: A. vera, A. arborescens, E. tirucalli, and T. impetiginosa. These plants are widely publicized in Brazil by the virtual media as having anticancer properties. Furthermore, there are several products containing A. vera and T. impetiginosa that are explicitly marketed over the internet for the treatment of cancer; however, these claims lack scientific support. This scenario, the low numbers of citations of plants identified as antitumor considering only one local community studied, has some implications if we want to use an ethnobotanical/ethnopharmacological approach for the search of new molecules with antineoplastic activity derived from the Brazilian flora. First, targeted ethnobotanical/ethnopharmacological studies in specific communities can easily result in no or few species being directly reported as antitumor. Should one want to perform a pharmacological study with less than 100 plants (triage) based on the popular knowledge of a single community, other selection criteria will be required besides a suggestion that a plant can be used to treat cancer. For the selection of species used in popular medicine, Santos and Elisabetsky [4] took into consideration not only the direct evidence that a plant was used for the treatment of cancer and tumors but also the signs and symptoms associated with certain cancers, which were related to the cell lines available for screening, and reports of the toxic effects common to chemotherapeutic agents (quantified by the order of importance). These selection criteria resulted in the identification of a greater number of candidate species for use in laboratory studies. Second, a greater number of ethnobotanical/ethnopharmacological studies conducted and data collected on a regional scale will increase the possibilities of identifying new molecules with antitumor effects. For example, using lung and breast cancer cell lines, Lee and Houghton [108] evaluated the in vitro cytotoxic activity of seven plant species used in traditional Malaysian and Thai medicine to treat cancer. Eleven extracts from six plant species (85.71% of the selected plants) exhibited antiproliferative activity against one of these cell lines, with IC50 values ranging from 2.7 to 35.8 μg/mL. These extracts are of interest for future investigations.

4.3. Survey of Ethnobotanical Studies

The large number of plant species have not been analyzed for their antitumor potential (64.29%, 54 taxa) or have only been studied in vitro (14.29%, 12 taxa) indicates there is ample space in the field for future investigations of the anticancer activity of such plants in Brazil. In general, the plants that were used in various experimental studies showed significant results in the pharmacological models used, and these results corroborated their popular use. Many researchers selected plants used in alternative and complementary medicine to treat cancer, with the goal of evaluating the antitumoral activity. Satisfactory results has been found for both in vitro and in vivo [109, 110] activities, demonstrating that plant species used in popular medicine are a promising source for new molecules. We propose the following suggestions for the plant species surveyed in this study: (1) for plants that have not been analyzed for their antitumor potential by any pharmacodynamic study, it is necessary to perform in vitro experiments with different solvents and using different cancer cell lines;,(2) for species from which active extracts have been isolated, including H. obovatus, A. hispidum, P. major, and S. occidentalis, it is necessary to identify the molecule(s) responsible for their biological activity, (3) for the species from which active extracts with known chemical structure(s) have been isolated and which have demonstrated significant activity in vitro, it is necessary to proceed with studies in vivo (e.g., V. odorata (cicloviolacina), C. officinalis (calenduloside), M. ilicifolia (pristimerina, 6-oxotingenol and erythrodiol), B. forficata (HY52), and C. langsdorffii (kaurenoic acid)), and (4) for the species that have met the previous requirements, it is necessary to make an extensive in vivo biological evaluation and subsequently proceed with clinical evaluations (e.g., S. marianum (silibinin), T. impetiginosa (β-lapachone), P. scandens (plumbagin), and C. frutescens (capsaicin)). The species addressed here constitute interesting objects for future studies for the various professionals in the field of natural products.
  65 in total

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  19 in total

1.  Cytotoxic effect of Erythroxylum daphnites extract is associated with G1 cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in oral squamous cell carcinoma.

Authors:  Silvia T Elias; Carolina C S Macedo; Luiz A Simeoni; Dâmaris Silveira; Pérola O Magalhães; Adriana Lofrano-Porto; Ricardo D Coletta; Francisco A R Neves; Eliete N S Guerra
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2016       Impact factor: 4.534

2.  Biologically based therapies are commonly self-prescribed by Brazilian women for the treatment of advanced breast cancer or its symptoms.

Authors:  Ana Camila Callado Alfano; Carlos Eduardo Paiva; Fernanda Capella Rugno; Raquel Haas da Silva; Bianca Sakamoto Ribeiro Paiva
Journal:  Support Care Cancer       Date:  2013-12-17       Impact factor: 3.603

3.  Hexane partition from Annona crassiflora Mart. promotes cytotoxity and apoptosis on human cervical cancer cell lines.

Authors:  Viviane A O Silva; Ana Laura V Alves; Marcela N Rosa; Larissa R V Silva; Matias E Melendez; Fernanda P Cury; Izabela N F Gomes; Aline Tansini; Giovanna B Longato; Olga Martinho; Bruno G Oliveira; Fernanda E Pinto; Wanderson Romão; Rosy I M A Ribeiro; Rui M Reis
Journal:  Invest New Drugs       Date:  2018-08-29       Impact factor: 3.850

Review 4.  How Should the Worldwide Knowledge of Traditional Cancer Healing Be Integrated with Herbs and Mushrooms into Modern Molecular Pharmacology?

Authors:  Yulia Kirdeeva; Olga Fedorova; Alexandra Daks; Nikolai Barlev; Oleg Shuvalov
Journal:  Pharmaceuticals (Basel)       Date:  2022-07-14

5.  Anacardic acid (6-pentadecylsalicylic acid) induces apoptosis of prostate cancer cells through inhibition of androgen receptor and activation of p53 signaling.

Authors:  Jing Tan; Binghai Chen; Leye He; Yuxin Tang; Zhiqiang Jiang; Guangmin Yin; Jinrong Wang; Xianzhen Jiang
Journal:  Chin J Cancer Res       Date:  2012-12       Impact factor: 5.087

6.  Activation of human neutrophils by the anti-inflammatory mediator Esenbeckia leiocarpa leads to atypical apoptosis.

Authors:  Rafael de Liz; Heros Horst; Moacir Geraldo Pizzolatti; Tânia Silvia Fröde; Denis Girard
Journal:  Mediators Inflamm       Date:  2012-05-08       Impact factor: 4.711

7.  Toxicologic assessment of a commercial decolorized whole leaf aloe vera juice, lily of the desert filtered whole leaf juice with aloesorb.

Authors:  Inder Sehgal; Wallace D Winters; Michael Scott; Andrew David; Glenn Gillis; Thaya Stoufflet; Anand Nair; Konstantine Kousoulas
Journal:  J Toxicol       Date:  2013-03-11

8.  Genotoxic effects of Tabebuia impetiginosa (Mart. Ex DC.) Standl. (Lamiales, Bignoniaceae) extract in Wistar rats.

Authors:  Odilon A Lemos; Júlio C M Sanches; Icaro E F Silva; Márcio L A Silva; Adriana H C Vinhólis; Mireille A P Felix; Raquel A Santos; Andréa O Cecchi
Journal:  Genet Mol Biol       Date:  2012-05-17       Impact factor: 1.771

9.  Seasonal variability of Chelidonium majus L. secondary metabolites content and antioxidant activity.

Authors:  Z Dragana Jakovljevic; S Milan Stankovic; D Marina Topuzovic
Journal:  EXCLI J       Date:  2013-03-15       Impact factor: 4.068

10.  Euphorbia tirucalli modulates gene expression in larynx squamous cell carcinoma.

Authors:  Gabriela Bueno Franco-Salla; Janesly Prates; Laila Toniol Cardin; Anemari Ramos Dinarte Dos Santos; Wilson Araújo da Silva; Bianca Rodrigues da Cunha; Eloiza Helena Tajara; Sonia Maria Oliani; Flávia Cristina Rodrigues-Lisoni
Journal:  BMC Complement Altern Med       Date:  2016-05-21       Impact factor: 3.659

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