| Literature DB >> 25202331 |
Abstract
Alepidea amatymbica is an important medicinal plant in Southern Africa with a long history of traditional use for the management of conditions like colds, coughs, sore throat, influenza, asthma, and abdominal cramps. Despite the much acclaimed traditional uses of the plant, there is a dearth of scientific information on the review of this plant. Hence, this review is aimed at providing information on the botany, phytochemistry, pharmacology, and toxicology of A. amatymbica. This review uses all the synonyms of the plant obtained from the plant list. Google scholar, Science Direct, PubMed, and Scopus were made use of in addition to the University of Fort Hare's online databases. All the phytochemical studies on Alepidea amatymbica obtained from the literature reported the presence of kaurene-type diterpenoids and their derivatives. Pharmacological areas identified on A. amatymbica fresh and dried extract include antibacterial, antifungal, sedative, astringent, antimalarial, anti-inflammatory, antihelminthes, antihypertensive, anti-HIV, and diuretic activities. Literature search on A. amatymbica revealed the use of cell line, brine shrimps, and rats for the determination of the toxicity in the plant. Clinical trials and product development to fully exploit the medicinal value are also required to validate its folklore use in traditional medicine.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25202331 PMCID: PMC4150506 DOI: 10.1155/2014/284517
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Figure 1(a) Alepidea amatymbica Eckl. & Zeyh. in its natural habitat (source: http://www.Plantzafrica.com), (b) dried rhizome of Alepidea amatymbica, and ((c) and (d)) Alepidea amatymbica growing in the nursery.
Traditional uses of Alepidea amatymbica Eckl. & Zeyh.
| Category of use | Description of traditional dosage | References |
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| Cultural and dietary | The dry rhizome and roots are smoked or powdered and taken as a snuff by diviners and healers to assist in divination and communication with ancestors | [ |
| Smoking the roots reportedly results in mild sedation and vivid dreams | [ | |
| The dry rhizome and roots are used as a lotion to wash the divining bones | [ | |
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| Antihypertensive | Fresh rhizomes | [ |
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| Nervousness | Dry rhizome and roots | [ |
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| Antimicrobial | Leaf, stem, rhizome, and root | [ |
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| Diuretic effects | Fresh rhizome | [ |
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| Respiratory | Rhizomes and roots are used for colds, coughs, and influenza and respiratory ailments | [ |
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| Inflammatory conditions | Rhizomes and roots are used for rheumatism and wounds | [ |
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| Gastrointestinal | Rhizomes and roots are used for stomach | [ |
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| Purgative | Rhizomes for the treatment of abdominal disorders | [ |
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| Mild sedation and vivid dreams | Smoking the roots | [ |
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| Antimalaria | Rhizome | [ |
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| Astringent | Fresh rhizome is applied externally | [ |
Figure 2Chemical structures of kaurene-type diterpenoids in Alepidea amatymbica.
Chemical groups, part of the plant studied, and isolated compounds isolated from Alepidea amatymbica Eckl. & Zeyh.
| Phytochemicals | Compound | Plant part | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Terpenes | ent-9, (11)-dehydro-16-kauren-19-oic acid | Rhizomes and roots | [ |
| ent-16-kauren-19-oic acid | Dried rhizomes | [ | |
| wedelia seco-kaurenolide | Dried rhizomes | [ | |
| 313-acetoxy | Dried rhizomes | [ | |
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| Phenolic acid | Phenolic acid | Rhizome | [ |
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| Rosmarinic acid | 3′-O- | Rhizome | [ |
Pharmacological investigation of Alepidea amatymbica Eckl. & Zeyh.
| Activity tested | Model used | Plant part used/tested material | Extract type | Dosage | Control | Results | Reference |
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| Antibacterial | Nutrient agar medium was mixed with extract and bacteria suspension. | Rhizome | DCM, PE, water, and EtOH rhizome extracts | 1 mg mL | Water and bacteria free broth (−ve), 0.1 mg/mL neomycin (+ve) | The PE and DCM extracts of the rhizomes exhibited the best activity (MIC values of 0.39 mg/mL) against | [ |
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| Antibacterial | Agar dilution methods with the following organisms: | Crude extracts of the leaf, stem, rhizome, and root | Acetone and methanol | 1–10 mg/mL | Plates containing 1% acetone and methanol in agar | The acetone rhizome extract showed better activity than others especially on | [ |
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| Antimicrobial | Microdilution method on Mueller-Hinton broth. Species | Rhizome and leaf (fresh, 90 days old, and one-year- old material) were assayed | Water, ethanol, and hexane extracts | 12.5, 6.25, 3.13, 1.56, 0.78, 0.39, 0.20, and 0.1 mg/mL | Extract-free solution and ethanol were used as a blank control and neomycin (+ve) | The water extracts of plants tested for antibacterial activity showed no activity, | [ |
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| Antimicrobial | Agar well diffusion method using | Roots/rhizomes | Ethyl acetate, acetone, ethanol, methanol, and water | 100 mg/mL | Clarithromycin and 10% DMSO were used as positive and negative controls, respectively | The plants demonstrated anti- | [ |
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| Antimicrobial | Agar well diffusion method. | Roots/rhizomes | Ethyl acetate, acetone, ethanol, methanol, and water | 0.002–5.0 mg/mL | Reference control strain (NCTC 11638). Metronidazole and amoxicillin were included as positive control antibiotics | Methanol was quantitatively the best solvent for all the plants while ethyl acetate had the lowest yields. | [ |
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| Antifungal | Agar dilution methods with the following organisms: | Crude extracts of the leaf, stem, rhizome, and root | Acetone and methanol | Radial pattern of streaking of organisms was used | Plates containing only PDA or PDA with the respective solvent | Diameter of the fungal growth was measured and expressed as percentage growth inhibition. All the extracts showed more than 50% mycotic inhibition with activity ranging from 51.39% to 81.11% at 5 mg/mL with the rhizome | [ |
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| Antifungal | The antifungal activity of the extracts was evaluated against | Rhizome | DCM, PE, water, and EtOH rhizome extracts | 0.1–5.0 mg/mL | Water and bacteria free broth (−ve), 0.1 mg/mL neomycin (+ve) | All the extracts showed activity against | [ |
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| Anti-inflammatory | Using the enzyme based cyclooxygenase assays COX-1 and COX-2 | Rhizome | DCM, PE, water, and EtOH rhizome extracts | 1 mg mL | Water and bacteria free broth (−ve), 0.1 mg/mL neomycin (+ve) | The PE and DCM extracts had high COX-1 activity with percentage inhibitions above 70%. Ethanol extracts had inhibition less than 40% | [ |
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| Antihypertensive | Purified compounds on blood pressure and heart rate of anesthetized Wistar rats. | Fresh rhizomes | Hexane extractive (AA/1), dichloromethane extractive, and methanol extractive | i.p. injection of sodium thiopentone (40 mg/kg body weight) | Chlorothiazide | In addition to the cardiovascular effects, distinct diuretic and natriuretic effects were found | [ |
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| Antiplasmodium |
| Whole plant | Dichloromethane (DCM), DCM/methanol (MeOH) (1 : 1), MeOH, and purified water | 100–0.2 | Chloroquine diphosphate served as the positive control | Detect plant-based antimalarial agents showing promising antiplasmodial activity with IC50 values of ≤10 g/mL | [ |
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| Diuretic | The Lipschitz test was used to determine the Diuretic and saluretic activity in rats | Fresh rhizome | Hexane/ethyl acetate extract | The test compound was applied orally at a dose of 50 mg/kg | Urea (1 g/kg b.w.) | The diuretic and natriuretic effects of the extractives were found to be similar to the effects of chlorothiazide | [ |
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| Cardiovascular | Purified compounds on blood pressure and heart rate of anesthetized Wistar rats | Purified compound from fresh rhizome | Hexane extract (AA/1), dichloromethane, and methanol portion of AA/1 were subjected to repeated flash chromatography with gradient elution (100–70% hexane/EtOAc) to give AA/3, a crystalline mixture of ent-kaur-en-19-oic acid, ent-kaura-9 (11), 16-dien-19-oic acid, and trachyloban-19-oic acid, AA/4, 16-methoxy-ent-kaur-11-en-19-oic acid, AA/5, 11-acetoxy-ent-kaur-16-en-19-oic acid, and AA/6, wedelia seco-kaurenolide | 20 mg/kg b.w. intraperitoneally | Ethylene glycol | Moderate, but significant, decreasing systolic blood pressure (SBP) and heart rate (HT) effects after intraperitoneal application on conscious rats | [ |
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| Anti-HIV | Extracts and therein subfractions of | Aerial parts and roots | Aqueous | 500 | Standard retroviral inhibitor | The active ingredient identified in the aqueous extract does not support a direct application of this plant extract for treating HIV infection. The anti-HIV activity of the pure compound was found to be quite moderate | [ |
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| Antihelminthes | Nematode growth agar with | Fresh and stored leaves and root | Ethanol | 1 mg/mL | Levamisole (+Ve) and nematode incubated with water (−Ve) | Only fresh and stored water extracts showed a significant antihelminthes | [ |
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| Toxicity | The bacterial cultures (100 | Rhizome | DCM, PE, water, and EtOH rhizome extracts | 50, 500, and 5000 | 4-Nitroquinoline-N-oxide (4NQO) was used as a positive control and water (−ve control) | The Ames test revealed that none of the plant extracts significantly increased the number of His+ revertants with respect to the negative control | [ |
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| Cytoxicity | HeLa, Vero, Jurkat E6.1, AA-2, or CEM-SS cells | Fresh rhizomes | Aqueous | 1 mg/mL | Not stated | The extract was not toxic at any concentration used in the test | [ |
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| Acute toxicity | Evaluation using brine shrimp | Fresh rhizomes | Hexane | Not stated | Not stated | The brine shrimp test showed that the crude hexane extracts have low toxicity with LC50 0.2 | [ |
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| Toxicity | The Hippocratic test on rats was used | Fresh rhizomes | Isolates from | 0.1 mg/mL | Verapamil (10 mg/kg) | All extracts, crude and purified, showed low toxicity ranging from LC50 0.5 to 5 ng/mL apart from AA/4 and AA/5 that produced slight diarrhea on days 3, 4, and 5 and other extractives showed no toxicity at a dose of 20 | [ |