| Literature DB >> 26196123 |
Mounir Tilaoui1, Hassan Ait Mouse1, Abdeslam Jaafari1, Abdelmajid Zyad1.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Carrying out the chemical composition and antiproliferative effects against cancer cells from different biological parts of Artemisia herba alba.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26196123 PMCID: PMC4510584 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0131799
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Essential oils chromatogram of different biological parts from Artemisia herba alba.
A: Leaves, B: Capitulum, C: Stems, D: Aerial parts (Mixture of leaves and capitulum).
Essential oils chemical composition (%) of leaves, stems, capitulum and aerial parts (mixture of capitulum and leaves) of Artemisia herba alba.
| Leaves | Stems | Capitulum | Aerial parts | Formula | MW | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monocyclic monoterpenes | ||||||
| Terpinen-4-ol | - | - | 0.89 | 2.43 | C10H16O | 152.23 |
| Piperitone | - | - | 1.01 | 2.69 | C10H16O | 152.23 |
| 3,5-Heptadienal, 2-ethylidene-6-methyl- | - | - | - | 1.74 | C10H14O | 150.21 |
| (+-)-2,3,6,7-tetramethyl-1,4,4aα,5,8,8aβ,9β,9aα,10,10aα-decahydroanthracen-9-ol | - | - | 19.58 | - | ||
| Monoterpenes with thujane skeleton | ||||||
| β-thujone | 1.24 | - | 7.00 | 6.14 | C10H16O | 152.23 |
| α- thujone | - | - | 2.91 | - | C10H16O | 152.23 |
| 3-thujanol | - | - | 1.07 | - | C10H16O | 152.23 |
| Cis-sabinol | - | - | - | 2.40 | C10H16O | 152.23 |
| Thujone | - | - | - | 1.01 | C10H16O | 152.23 |
| Trans-sabinene hydrate | - | - | - | 1.24 | C10H20O | 172.26 |
| Monoterpenes with bornane skelton | ||||||
| Camphor | - | - | 1.45 | 5.12 | C10H16O | 152.23 |
| Fenchol | - | - | 1.86 | 3.86 | C10H18O | 154.25 |
| Monoterpenes with pinane skelton | ||||||
| Verbenol | 2.16 | - | 5.99 | 21.83 | C10H16O | 152.24 |
| Myrtenol | 2.32 | - | 1.74 | 4.19 | C10H16O | 152.23 |
| Chrysanthenone | - | - | 1.51 | - | C10H14O | 150.22 |
| Sesquiterpenes | ||||||
| Widdrene | 9.95 | - | - | - | C15H24 | 204.35 |
| α-bergamotene | 3.31 | - | - | - | C15H24 | 204.35 |
| α-longipinene | - | - | 1.84 | - | C15H24 | 204.35 |
| β-Guaiene | - | - | 11.08 | - | C15H24 | 204.35 |
| α –bulnesene | 15.78 | - | - | - | C15H24 | 204.35 |
| Ester | ||||||
| Acetic acid, butyl ester | 1.49 | 10.50 | 1.19 | - | C6H12O2 | 116.15 |
| 2,5-Octadecadiynoic acid, methyl ester | 22.48 | 3.08 | 9.51 | - | C21H38O2 | 322.52 |
| 1-Butanol, 3-methyl-, acetate | - | 2.10 | - | - | C7H14O2 | 130.18 |
| [1,1'-Bicyclopropyl]-2-octanoic acid, 2'-hexyl-, methyl ester | - | 5.79 | - | - | C21H38O2 | 322.52 |
| Cyclopropaneoctanoic acid, 2-[[2-[(2thylcyclopropyl)methyl]cyclopropyl]methyl]-, methyl ester | - | 4.65 | - | - | C22H38O2 | 334.53 |
| Ethyl linoleate | - | 19.28 | - | - | C20H36O2 | 308.50 |
| Linoleic acid | - | 6.31 | - | - | C18H32O2 | 280.44 |
| 13,16-Octadecadiynoic acid, methyl ester | - | 11.09 | - | - | C21H38O2 | 322.52 |
| Oxygenated sesquiterpenoids | ||||||
| Caryophyllene oxide | 1.49 | - | - | 1.76 | C15H24O | 220.35 |
| Farnesene epoxide, E | 4.97 | - | 4.38 | 17.08 | C15H24O | 220.35 |
| Bisabolone oxide | 10.27 | - | 13.64 | 17.55 | C15H24O2 | 236.35 |
| trans-(Z)-α-bisabolene epoxide | - | 2.86 | - | - | C15H24O | 220.35 |
| 1,2–15,16-Diepoxyhexadecane | - | - | - | C20H40O2 | 312.53 | |
| Eucalyptol (1,8-Cineole) | 20.37 | 7.71 | 1.49 | 2.27 | C10H18O | 154.24 |
| Α-bisabolol oxide A | - | - | 2.20 | 2.26 | C15H26O2 | 238.36 |
| Bergamotol, Z-α-trans | 2.79 | - | 0.97 | 2.24 | C15H24O | 220.35 |
| α-Bisabolol oxide | - | - | - | 2.99 | C15H26O2 | 238.37 |
| Yield of essential oils (%) | 0,15 | 0,12 | 0,6 | 0,22 |
Essential oils monoterpenes compounds of Artemisia herba alba (%).
| Leaves | Stems | Capitulum | Aerial parts | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oxygenated sesquiterpenoids | 39,89 | 10,57 | 22,86 | 46,15 |
| Sesquiterpenes | 29,04 | 12.92 | ||
| Esters | 23,97 | 62,8 | ||
| Monoterpenes with pinane skelton | 4,48 | 9,24 | 26,02 | |
| Monoterpenes with thujane skeleton | 1,24 | 10,91 | 10.78 | |
| Monocyclic monoterpenes | 21,48 | 6.59 | ||
| Monoterpenes with bornane skelton | 3,31 | 8.98 | ||
| Fatty acid derivate | 17.22 |
Fig 2Structures of the most abundant compounds identified in different parts of Artemisia herba alba essential oils.
Fig 3Cytotoxic effect of Artemisia herba alba essential oils on P815 cell line.
P815 cells treated with different concentrations of essential oils from aerial parts (EOAP), leaves (EOL) and capitulum (EOC). Bars show the mean percentage ± SD. *P<0.05.
Fig 4Cytotoxic effect of Artemisia herba alba essential oils on BSR cell line.
BSR cells treated with different concentrations of essential oils from aerial parts (EOAP), leaves (EOL) and capitulum (EOC) of Artemisia herba alba for 48h. Bar graph shows the mean percentage ± SD. *P < 0.05.
Fig 5Effect of Artemisia herba alba essential oils against the PBMC.
PBMC were prepared from human normal donors by Ficoll-hypaque density centrifugation. Cells were incubated in 96-well microtiter plates in the presence of different essential oils (essential oil of leaves: EOL, essential oils of capitulum: EOC and essential oils of aerial parts: EOAP) at different concentrations (0, 4 μg/ml–50μg/ml). After 48 h incubation, viability was determined using MTT assay as described in materials and methods. Bar graph shows the mean percentage ± SD. *P < 0.05.
Fig 6Effect of essential oils from different organs plant of Artemisia herba alba against normal cells (PBMCS) and cancer cell lines (P815, BSR).
EOC: essential oils of capitulum; EOL: essential oils of leaves; EOAP: essential oils of aerial parts (mixture of leaves and capitulum). Bar graph shows the mean percentage ± SD. *P < 0.05.