| Literature DB >> 22611429 |
Manyatja Brenda Mapunya1, Roumiana Vassileva Nikolova, Namrita Lall.
Abstract
Melanin is the pigment that is responsible for the colour of eyes, hair, and skin in humans. Tyrosinase is known to be the key enzyme in melanin biosynthesis. Overactivity of this enzyme leads to dermatological disorders such as age spots, melanoma and sites of actinic damage. Ten plants belonging to four families (Asphodelaceae, Anacardiaceae, Oleaceae, and Rutaceae) were investigated for their effect on tyrosinase using both L-tyrosine and L-DOPA as substrates. Ethanol leaf extracts (500 μg/mL) of Aloe ferox, Aloe aculeata, Aloe pretoriensis, and Aloe sessiliflora showed 60%, 31%, 17%, and 13% inhibition of tyrosinase activity respectively, when L-tyrosine was used as a substrate. Harpephyllum caffrum (leaves) at a concentration of 500 μg/mL had an inhibitory effect of 70% on tyrosinase when L-DOPA was used as a substrate. The IC(50) of Harpephyllum caffrum (leaves and bark) were found to be 51 ± 0.002 and 40 ± 0.035 μg/mL, respectively. Following the results obtained from the tyrosinase assay, extracts from Harpephyllum caffrum were selected for further testing on their effect on melanin production and their cytotoxicity on melanocytes in vitro. The IC(50) of both extracts was found to be 6.25 μg/mL for melanocyte cells. Bark extract of Harpephyllum caffrum showed 26% reduction in melanin content of melanocyte cells at a concentration of 6.25 μg/mL. The leaf extract of this plant showed some toxicity on melanocyte cells. Therefore, the bark extract of Harpephyllum caffrum could be considered as an antityrosinase agent for dermatological disorders such as age spots and melasoma.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22611429 PMCID: PMC3348649 DOI: 10.1155/2012/374017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
List of selected plants and their traditional uses.
| Plants | Common names | Family name | Medicinal use |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Ngopane | Asphodelaceae | Used as a skin lightening [ |
|
| Ikalane/Umhlabana | Asphodelaceae | Leaf extracts have shown to have significant wound healing, antimicrobial, anti-ulcer and anticarcinogenic activity [ |
|
| Ikhala/Inhlaba | Asphodelaceae | Sap in the leaves used traditionally as laxatives and can be taken for arthritis [ |
|
| N/A | Asphodelaceae | Used as a skin lightening [ |
|
| N/A | Asphodelaceae | Used traditionally to treat the uterus and believed to promote menstruation [ |
|
| N/A | Asphodelaceae | The gel from leaves is used as a remedy for minor burns and scrapes and for sunburn [ |
|
| Umbhaba | Rutaceae | Used as a facial mask [ |
|
| Umbhaba | Rutaceae | Used traditionally in soaps and as a skin-lightener as white umemezi [ |
|
| Umgwenya | Anacardiaceae | Used as a face mask [ |
|
| Umgwenya | Anacardiaceae | Acne and eczema treatment, and is usually applied as facial saunas and skin washes [ |
|
| Morula | Anacardiaceae | Oil extracted from the kernels is Africa's greatest skin care oil and as a skin-lightener (personal communication) [ |
|
| Umthunduluka-obmvu | Olacaceae | Seeds contain valuable oil that is used traditionally to soothe leather and as cosmetic and skin ointment [ |
N/A Not available.
Inhibitory activity of selected plants on tyrosinase when both tyrosine and L-DOPA are used.
| Plant extracts | (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Tyrosine | L-DOPA | |
|
| 31 | — |
|
| — | * |
|
| 60 | — |
|
| 17 | — |
|
| 13 | — |
|
| — | * |
|
| — | * |
|
| — | * |
|
| 90 | 70 |
|
| 92 | 60 |
|
| — | * |
|
| — | * |
*not tested, —not active.
The IC50 (concentrations at which half the tyrosinase activity is inhibited) values of active plant extracts and positive control.
| Plant extracts/ Positive control | IC50 (Tyrosine) | IC50 (L-DOPA) |
|---|---|---|
|
| 51 ± 0.002 | 125 ± 0.08 |
|
| 40 ± 0.035 | 250 ± 0.12 |
| Kojic acid | 2.145 ± 0.082 | 26.66 ± 0.104 |
Figure 1The effect of samples on cell viability/proliferation and melanin production by melanocyte cells, H. caffrum bark (a), leaves (b), A. arborescence leaves (c), and Kojic acid (d).