| Literature DB >> 28324460 |
Seema Patel1, Suryakanta Panda2.
Abstract
Mistletoes are a group of obligate plant semi-parasites in the order Santalales. These clumps of plants growing on a wide range of host plants have been traditionally regarded as medicinal repositories. However, current scientific discoveries have validated their health potentials like never before. Their extracts containing alkaloids, viscotoxins, lectins, and polysaccharides have been evidenced to possess a myriad biological potentials including cancer inhibition. Mistletoes have emerged as promising alternative therapy against colon, oral, lung, and pancreas cancers. The plant extracts bolster immunity, delay tumour initiation and progression, kill malignant tumours, stabilize DNA, alleviate side effects of chemotherapeutics, improve the lifespan, and coping ability of cancer patients and survivors. A range of proprietary formulations viz. Iscador, Eurixor, Helixor, Lektinol, Isorel, Iscucin, Abnoba-viscum and recombinant lectin ML-1 are already being commercialized. This review presents an informative account on the recent developments in mistletoe-mediated cancer management. The underlying mechanisms, possibilities and limitations in cancer therapeutic development are outlined for kindling both researcher and public interest.Entities:
Keywords: Anticancer; Immune modifier; Lectin; Mistletoe; Polysaccharide
Year: 2013 PMID: 28324460 PMCID: PMC3909578 DOI: 10.1007/s13205-013-0124-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: 3 Biotech ISSN: 2190-5738 Impact factor: 2.406
The common and scientific names of referred mistletoes and the families to which they belong
| Mistletoes | Species | Family | References |
|---|---|---|---|
American Mexican Juniper |
| Viscaceae | Alonso-Castro et al. ( Lopez-Martinez et al. ( |
European Red-berry Korean |
| Loranthaceae | Cebovic et al. ( Hong and Lyu ( Yang et al. ( |
| Catkin |
| Loranthaceae | Liu et al. ( |
| Mexican |
| Loranthaceae | Moustapha et al. ( |
| Loranthus | Loranthaceae | Xiao et al. ( |
Fig. 1a Mistletoe plant on host tree, b mistletoe with berries
Fig. 2Key anticancer compounds found in mistletoe
Fig. 3Schematic diagram of mistletoe lectin-mediated anticancer activity