| Literature DB >> 28326125 |
Sara H Freiesleben1, Jens Soelberg2, Nils T Nyberg1, Anna K Jäger1.
Abstract
The present study was carried out to investigate the wound healing potentials of 17 medicinal plants historically used in Ghana for wound healing. Warm and cold water extracts were prepared from the 17 dried plant species and tested in vitro in the scratch assay with NIH 3T3 fibroblasts from mice. The wound healing scratch assay was used to evaluate the effect of the plants on cell proliferation and/or migration in vitro, as a test for potential wound healing properties. After 21 hours of incubation increased proliferation and/or migration of fibroblasts in the scratch assay was obtained for 5 out of the 17 plant species. HPLC separation of the most active plant extract, which was a warm water extract of Philenoptera cyanescens, revealed the wound healing activity to be attributed to rutin and a triglycoside of quercetin. The present study suggests that Allophylus spicatus, Philenoptera cyanescens, Melanthera scandens, Ocimum gratissimum, and Jasminum dichotomum have wound healing activity in vitro.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28326125 PMCID: PMC5343285 DOI: 10.1155/2017/9480791
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Plant species historically used for wound healing in Ghana.
| Plant species | Family | Voucher | Collection site location | Plant part |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Zingiberaceae | JS 224 | N 05°51 17.0, W 00°10 30.2 | Semen |
|
| Sapindaceae | JS 206 | N 05°39 25.3, W 00°11 08.2 | Radix |
| Herba | ||||
|
| Annonaceae | JS 253 | N 05°39 24.6, W 00°11 29.5 | Folium |
|
| Vitaceae | JS 256 | N 05°39 14.0, W 00°11 06.6 | Herba |
|
| Asteraceae | JS 268 | N 05°49 59.1, W 00°07 03.3 | Folium cum Flos |
| Radix | ||||
|
| Fabaceae | JS 270 | N 05°49 59.1, W 00°07 03.3 | Herba |
|
| Oleaceae | JS 273 | N 05°54 21.1, W 00°00 18.5 | Folium |
|
| Lamiaceae | JS 278 | N 05°54 21.1, W 00°00 18.5 | Herba |
|
| Asteraceae | JS 220 | N 05°51 49.8, W 00°10 01.0 | Herba |
|
| Fabaceae | JS 294 | N 05°39 13.3, W 00°11 12.5 | Cortex |
|
| Lamiaceae | JS 223 | N 05°51 49.8, W 00°10 01.0 | Herba |
|
| Fabaceae | JS 204 | N 05°42 59.4, W 00°10 35.5 | Folium cum Fructus |
|
| Connaraceae | JS 248 | N 05°39 24.1, W 00°11 11.0 | Folium |
| Radix | ||||
|
| Balanophoraceae | JS 296 | N 05°51 10.6, W 00°10 41.9 | Herba |
|
| Meliaceae | JS 260 | N 05°51 15.9, W 00°10 30.1 | Cortex |
|
| Malvaceae | JS 272 | N 05°54 52.3, W 00°02 17.0 | Radix |
|
| Annonaceae | JS 207 | N 05°39 26.0, W 00°11 05.4 | Folium |
| Cortex | ||||
| Radix | ||||
| Folium cum Flos |
Figure 1Effect of cold (C) and warm (W) water extracts of plants from Ghana tested for wound healing activity in the scratch assay.
Figure 2HPLC chromatogram of Philenoptera cyanescens at 310 nm separated into fractions 1–6.
Figure 3Activity of fractions 1–6 of Philenoptera cyanescens tested in the wound healing scratch assay. Neg: negative control, Pos: positive control (20 ng/mL PDGF).
Figure 4Concentration dependent migration of NIH 3T3 fibroblasts when incubated with rutin or the quercetin-3O-triglucoside from fraction 3.