| Literature DB >> 26978330 |
Shaheed Ur Rehman1, Kevin Choe2, Hye Hyun Yoo3.
Abstract
Eurycoma longifolia Jack (known as tongkat ali), a popular traditional herbal medicine, is a flowering plant of the family Simaroubaceae, native to Indonesia, Malaysia, Vietnam and also Cambodia, Myanmar, Laos and Thailand. E. longifolia, is one of the well-known folk medicines for aphrodisiac effects as well as intermittent fever (malaria) in Asia. Decoctions of E. longifolia leaves are used for washing itches, while its fruits are used in curing dysentery. Its bark is mostly used as a vermifuge, while the taproots are used to treat high blood pressure, and the root bark is used for the treatment of diarrhea and fever. Mostly, the roots extract of E. longifolia are used as folk medicine for sexual dysfunction, aging, malaria, cancer, diabetes, anxiety, aches, constipation, exercise recovery, fever, increased energy, increased strength, leukemia, osteoporosis, stress, syphilis and glandular swelling. The roots are also used as an aphrodisiac, antibiotic, appetite stimulant and health supplement. The plant is reported to be rich in various classes of bioactive compounds such as quassinoids, canthin-6-one alkaloids, β-carboline alkaloids, triterpene tirucallane type, squalene derivatives and biphenyl neolignan, eurycolactone, laurycolactone, and eurycomalactone, and bioactive steroids. Among these phytoconstituents, quassinoids account for a major portion of the E. longifolia root phytochemicals. An acute toxicity study has found that the oral Lethal Dose 50 (LD50) of the alcoholic extract of E. longifolia in mice is between 1500-2000 mg/kg, while the oral LD50 of the aqueous extract form is more than 3000 mg/kg. Liver and renal function tests showed no adverse changes at normal daily dose and chronic use of E. longifolia. Based on established literature on health benefits of E. longifolia, it is important to focus attention on its more active constituents and the constituents' identification, determination, further development and most importantly, the standardization. Besides the available data, more evidence is required regarding its therapeutic efficacy and safety, so it can be considered a rich herbal source of new drug candidates. It is very important to conserve this valuable medicinal plant for the health benefit of future generations.Entities:
Keywords: Eurycoma longifolia; pharmacological effects; quassinoids; safety; traditional herbal medicine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26978330 PMCID: PMC6274257 DOI: 10.3390/molecules21030331
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Major isolated chemical constituents with metabolites from Eurycoma longifolia Jack and their pharmacological effects.
| Chemical Compounds Isolated | Plant Parts | Pharmacological Effects | References (Isolation & Pharmacological Effects) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eurycomanone (C20) | Roots | Increased testosterone production | [ |
| Eurycomanol (C20) | Roots | Antimalarial against | [ |
| 5α,14β,15β-Trihydroxyklaineanone | Leaves, Roots | Cytotoxicity against human lung cancer (A-549), and human breast cancer (MCF- 7) cell lines | [ |
| Laurycolactones A and B (C18) | Roots | Cytotoxicity against human HT1080 | [ |
| Eurycomalactone (C19) | Roots | Cytotoxicity against human lung cancer (A-549), breast cancer (MCF- 7) and gastric cancer (MGC-803) cell lines | [ |
| Eurycomalides A and B (C19) | Roots | Cytotoxicity against human lung cancer (A-549), and human breast cancer (MCF-7) cell lines | [ |
| Eurycomaoside | Roots | ENR | [ |
| Longilactone (C19) | Leaves, Roots | Cytotoxicity against human HT1080 | [ |
| Eurycolactone A(C20) | Roots | Cytotoxicity against human HT1080 | [ |
| Eurylactones A and B (C18) | ENR | [ | |
| Canthin-6-one alkaloids | Plant (bark, Stem and Roots) | Oxidative burst inhibitory, and cytotoxic activity | [ |
| β-Carboline alkaloids | Roots | Antimalarial against | [ |
| Biphenyl neolignans | Stem | ENR | [ |
| Squalene-type triterpenes | Stem | Cytotoxicity | [ |
| Phytosterols | Plant | ENR | [ |
| Pasakbumin-A, -B, -C, -D (C20) | Roots | Anti-ulcer | [ |
| Tirucallane-type triterpenes | Stem | Anti-cancer activity against ovarian leukemia and renal cell lines | [ |
| Tirucallane-type triterpenoid | Stem | ENR | [ |
| Oxasqualenoid | Stem | ENR | [ |
| Anthraquinones and anthraquinone glucosides | Roots | ENR | [ |
| Glycoprotein | Plant | ENR | [ |
| In cell suspension cultures, two canthin-6-one alkaloids | Plant | Antimalarial against | [ |
| Predominant amino acids | Plant (Roots) | ENR | [ |
| A 4.3kDa bioactive peptide | Roots | ENR | [ |
| Starch (about 39%) | Roots | ENR | [ |
Note: ENR = Evidence Not Reported (much of the available evidence about the pharmacological effects of Eurycoma Longifolia, is related to its extracts (mixtures), so these effects cannot be correlated with specific chemical constituents or groups).
Figure 1Chemical structures of various biological active constituents from E. longifolia; (A) 7-Methoxy-beta-carboline-1-propionic acid (C15); (B) 9-methoxycanthin-6-one (C15); (C) Laurycolactone (C17); (D) Eurycolactone B (C18); (E) Eurycomalide A (C19); (F) Eurylactone (C19); (G) Longilactone (C19); (H) Eurycomalactone (C19); (I) Eurycomanone (C20); (J) Eurycomanol (C20); (K) Pasakbumin B (C20); (L) Hydroxyklaineanone (C20); (M) Biphenyl-neolignan (C21); (N) Quassin (C22, basic ring of quassinoids); (O) Niloticin (C30); and (P) Eurylene (C34).