| Literature DB >> 30151067 |
Islam Rady1, Melissa B Bloch2, Roxane-Cherille N Chamcheu1,3, Sergette Banang Mbeumi4, Md Rafi Anwar2, Hadir Mohamed5, Abiola S Babatunde6, Jules-Roger Kuiate7,8, Felicite K Noubissi4,9, Khalid A El Sayed2, G Kerr Whitfield10, Jean Christopher Chamcheu1,2.
Abstract
Graviola (Annona muricata) is a small deciduous tropical evergreen fruit tree, belonging to the Annonaceae family, and is widely grown and distributed in tropical and subtropical regions around the world. The aerial parts of graviola have several functions: the fruits have been widely used as food confectionaries, while several preparations, especially decoctions of the bark, fruits, leaves, pericarp, seeds, and roots, have been extensively used in traditional medicine to treat multiple ailments including cancers by local communities in tropical Africa and South America. The reported therapeutic benefits of graviola against various human tumors and disease agents in in vitro culture and preclinical animal model systems are typically tested for their ability to specifically target the disease, while exerting little or no effect on normal cell viability. Over 212 phytochemical ingredients have been reported in graviola extracts prepared from different plant parts. The specific bioactive constituents responsible for the major anticancer, antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, and other health benefits of graviola include different classes of annonaceous acetogenins (metabolites and products of the polyketide pathway), alkaloids, flavonoids, sterols, and others. This review summarizes the current understanding of the anticancer effects of A. muricata and its constituents on diverse cancer types and disease states, as well as efficacy and safety concerns. It also includes discussion of our current understanding of possible mechanisms of action, with the hope of further stimulating the development of improved and affordable therapies for a variety of ailments.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30151067 PMCID: PMC6091294 DOI: 10.1155/2018/1826170
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Different solvent extracts of A. muricata and their reported anticancer activities.
| Extract (solvent) | Cancers (cell lines) |
|---|---|
|
| Cervical (HeLa) cancer [ |
| Chloroform | Cervical (HeLa) cancer [ |
| Pentane | Melanoma (A375) cancer [ |
|
| (MDA-MB-435S) cancer [ |
| DMSO | Pancreatic (Capan-1 [ |
| Fungal strain | Breast (MCF-7) [ |
| H2O | Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC-25) [ |
| Hexane | Breast (MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231) [ |
| Ethyl acetate | Breast (MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231) [ |
| Ethanol | Ehrlich ascite carcinoma (EACC) [ |
| Methanol | Breast (MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 [ |
Figure 1Chemical structure of compounds derived from fungal strain extracts and the cancers sensitive to them.
AGEs of A. muricata reported to have anticancer activities. Structures were drawn using ChemDraw, Arial, point 20.
| Compound names | Structure | Molecular formula | MWT (g/mol) | Cancer cell lines tested on |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Annocatacin A |
| C35H62O6 | 578.88 | Hepatic (Hep G2 and Hep 2,2,15) cancer [ |
| Annocatacin B |
| C35H62O6 | 578.88 | Hepatic (Hep G2 and Hep 2,2,15) cancer [ |
| Annocatalin |
| C35H64O7 | 596.89 | Hepatic (Hep G2 and Hep 2,2,15) cancer [ |
| Annohexocin |
| C35H64O9 | 628.888 | Breast (MCF-7), prostate (PC-3), colorectal (HT-29), lung (A549), renal (A498) and pancreatic (PACA-2) cancers [ |
| Annomuricin A |
| C35H64O8 | 612.889 | Breast (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29), lung (A549) [ |
| Annomuricin B |
| C35H64O8 | 612.889 | Breast (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29), and lung (A549) cancers [ |
| Annomuricin C |
| C35H64O8 | 612.889 | Breast (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29), and lung (A549) cancers [ |
| Annomuricin E |
| C35H64O8 | 612.889 | Breast (MCF-7), prostate (PC-3), lung (A549), renal (A498), pancreatic (PACA) [ |
| Annomutacin |
| C37H68O7 | 624.944 | Breast cancer (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29), and lung cancers (A549) [ |
| Annonacin |
| C35H64O7 | 596.89 | |
| Annonacin A |
| C35H64O7 | 596.89 | Leukemia (U-937) [ |
| Annonacinone |
| C35H62O7 | 594.874 | Oral cancer (KB) [ |
| Annopentocin A |
| C35H64O8 | 612.889 | Breast (MCF-7), prostate (PC-3), colorectal (HT-29), lung (A549), renal (A498), and pancreatic (PACA-2) cancers [ |
| Annopentocin B |
| C35H64O8 | 612.889 | Breast (MCF-7), prostate (PC-3), colorectal (HT-29), lung (A549), renal (A498), and pancreatic (PACA-2) cancers [ |
| Annopentocin C |
| C35H64O8 | 612.889 | Breast (MCF-7), prostate (PC-3), colorectal (HT-29), lung (A549), renal (A498), and pancreatic (PACA-2) cancers [ |
| Arianacin |
| C35H64O7 | 596.89 | Breast (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29), and lung (A549) cancers [ |
| Corossolin |
| C35H64O6 | 580.891 | Hepatic (Hep G2 and Hep 2,2,15) [ |
| Corossolone |
| C35H62O6 | 578.875 | Hepatic cancer (Hep G2 and Hep 2,2,15) [ |
| Gigantetrocin |
| C35H64O7 | 596.89 | Breast (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29), and lung (A549) cancers [ |
| Gigantetrocin A |
| C35H64O7 | 596.89 | Breast (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29), and lung (A549) cancers [ |
| Gigantetrocin B |
| C35H64O7 | 596.89 | Breast (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29), and lung (A549) cancers [ |
| Goniothalamicin |
| C35H64O7 | 596.89 | Breast (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29), and lung (A549) cancers [ |
| Isoannonacin |
| C35H64O7 | 596.89 | Breast (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29), and lung (A549) cancers [ |
| Isoannonacin-10-one |
| C35H62O7 | 594.874 | Breast (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29), and lung (A549) cancers [ |
| Javoricin |
| C35H64O7 | 596.89 | Breast (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29), and lung (A549) cancers [ |
| Longifolicin |
| C35H64O6 | 580.891 | Hepatic (Hep G2 and Hep 2,2,15) cancer [ |
| Muricapentocin |
| C35H64O8 | 612.889 | Breast (MCF-7), prostate (PC-3), colorectal (HT-29), lung cancer (A549), renal (A498), and pancreatic (PACA) cancers [ |
| Muricatacin |
| C17H32O3 | 284.44 | Breast (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29), and lung (A549) cancers [ |
| Muricatetrocin A |
| C35H64O7 | 596.89 | Breast (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29), and lung (A549) cancers [ |
| Muricatetrocin B |
| C35H64O7 | 596.89 | Breast (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29), and lung (A549) cancers [ |
| Muricatocin A |
| C35H64O8 | 612.889 | Breast (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29) and lung (A549) cancers [ |
| Muricatocin B |
| C35H64O8 | 612.889 | Breast (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29), and lung (A549) cancers [ |
| Muricatocin C |
| C35H64O8 | 612.889 | Breast (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29), and lung (A549) cancers [ |
| Muricenin |
| Prostate (PC-3) cancer [ | ||
| Muricin A |
| C35H64O7 | 596.878 | Hepatic (Hep G2 and Hep 2,2,15) cancer [ |
| Muricin B |
| C35H64O7 | 596.878 | Hepatic (Hep G2 and Hep 2,2,15) cancer [ |
| Muricin C |
| C35H64O7 | 596.878 | Hepatic (Hep G2 and Hep 2,2,15) cancer [ |
| Muricin D |
| C33H60O7 | 568.836 | Hepatic (Hep G2 and Hep 2,2,15) cancer [ |
| Muricin E |
| Hepatic (Hep G2 and Hep 2,2,15) cancer [ | ||
| Muricin F |
| C35H62O7 | 594.874 | Hepatic (Hep G2 and Hep 2,2,15) cancer [ |
| Muricin G |
| Hepatic (Hep G2 and Hep 2,2,15) cancer [ | ||
| Muricin H |
| C35H64O6 | 580.891 | Hepatic (Hep G2 and Hep 2,2,15) cancer [ |
| Muricin I |
| C37H66O6 | 606.929 | Hepatic (Hep G2 and Hep 2,2,15) cancer [ |
| Muricin J |
| C22H38O7 | 414.2618 | Prostate (PC-3) cancer [ |
| Muricin K |
| C24H42O7 | 442.2931 | Prostate (PC-3) cancer [ |
| Muricin L |
| C24H42O7 | 442.2931 | Prostate (PC-3) cancer [ |
| Muricin M |
| C24H42O7 | 442.2931 | Prostate (PC-3) cancer [ |
| Muricin N |
| C22H38O7 | 414.2618 | Prostate (PC-3) cancer [ |
| Muricoreacin |
| C35H64O9 | 628.4550 | Breast (MCF-7), prostate (PC-3), colorectal (HT-29), lung cancer (A549), renal cancer (A498), and pancreatic (PACA-2) cancers [ |
| Murihexocin A |
| C35H64O9 | 628.888 | Breast (MCF-7), prostate (PC-3), colorectal (HT-29), lung (A549), renal (A498), and pancreatic (PACA-2) cancers [ |
| Murihexocin B |
| C35H64O9 | 628.4550 | Breast (MCF-7), prostate (PC-3), colorectal (HT-29), lung (A549), renal (A498), and pancreatic (PACA-2) cancers [ |
| Murihexocin C |
| C31H56O9 | 572.3924 | Breast (MCF-7), prostate (PC-3), colorectal (HT-29), lung cancer (A549), renal cancer (A498), and pancreatic (PACA-2) cancers [ |
| Murisolin |
| C35H63NO6 | 593.4655 | Oral (KB) cancer [ |
| Solamin |
| C35H64O5 | 564.892 | Oral (KB) cancer [ |
| Vinblastine |
| C46H58N4O9 | 810.989 | Oral (KB) cancer [ |
|
|
| C37H68O7 | 624.4965 | Hepatic (Hep G2 and Hep 2,2,15) cancer [ |
|
|
| C35H64O7 | 596.88 | Breast (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29), and lung (A549) cancers [ |
|
|
| C35H62O7 | 594.874 | Breast (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29), and lung (A549) cancers [ |
|
|
| C35H62O6 | 578.875 | Hepatic (Hep G2 and Hep 2,2,15) cancer [ |
|
|
| C35H64O7 | 596.89 | Breast (MCF-7), colorectal (HT-29), and lung (A549) cancers [ |
Figure 2Chemical structures of two AGE combinations along with their targeted cancer phenotype.
Anticancer effects of AGEs and extracts derived from the different aerial organs of A. muricata.
| Cancers | Cell lines | Chemical compound or solvent | Class | Plant part | Dose, IC50, ED50, GI50, LC50, IC25, and/or MIC | Anticancer effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breast cancer | MCF-7 | Annomuricin A | AGE | Leaf | ED50 > 1.0 | Cytotoxic activity [ |
| Annomuricin B | ||||||
| Annomuricin C | AGE | Leaf | —–— | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Annomuricin E | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.45 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricatocin C | AGE | Leaf | —–— | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricapentocin | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.90 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Annomutacin | AGE | Leaf | ED50 > 1.0 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| (2,4- | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 5.70 × 10−1 | |||
| Annohexocin | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 2.26 | Significant cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricatocin A | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.23 × 10−1 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricatocin B | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.03 × 10−1 | |||
| Annopentocin A | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 17.93 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Annopentocin B | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 3.56 | |||
| Annopentocin C | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 2.97 | |||
|
| AGEs | Leaf | ED50 = 6.11 × 10−1 | |||
| Murihexocin A | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 12.54 | Significant cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Murihexocin B | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 6.95 | |||
| Murihexocin C | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 3.8 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricoreacin | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 1.3 | |||
| Muricatacin | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 9.8 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Isoannonacin | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 1.1 × 10−2 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Isoannonacin-10-one | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 1.4 × 10−2 | |||
| Goniothalamicin | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 5.7 × 10−2 | |||
| Gigantetrocin | AGE | Seed and/or leaf | IC50 = 2.3 × 10−2 | |||
| Gigantetrocin A | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 5.3 × 10−1 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricatetrocin A | AGE | Seed and/or leaf | ED50 = 1.03 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricatetrocin B | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 1.86 | |||
| Gigantetrocin B | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 5.3 × 10−1 | |||
|
| AGE | Seed | IC50 = 1.18 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
|
| AGE | Seed | IC50 = 2.9 × 10−1 | |||
|
| AGE | Seed | IC50 = 1.05 | |||
| Arianacin | AGE | Leaf | IC50 = 4.0 × 10−1 | |||
| Javoricin | AGE | Leaf | IC50 = 2.3 × 10−1 | |||
| Hexane | Extract | Leaf | Doses: 1.56, 3.12, 6.25, 12.5, 25, 50, and 100 | Significantly reduced cell proliferation in cancer cells [ | ||
| Ethyl acetate | Extract | Fruit | Doses: 1.56, 3.12, 6.25, 12.5, 25, 50, and 100 | |||
| Methanol | Extract | Leaf | Doses: 1.56, 3.12, 6.25, 12.5, 25, 50, and 100 | |||
| ——— | Extract | Leaf | 0, 50, 100, 150, and 200 | Inhibited growth of cancer cells [ | ||
| Ethanol (95%) | Extract | Leaf | GI50 = 6.2 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| (+)-(3S,6S,7R,8S)-Periconone A | Fungal strain Extract | Leaf | 0.01–10 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| (−)-(1R,4R,6S,7S)-2-Caren-4,8-olide | ||||||
| MDA-MB-231 | Hexane | Extract | Leaf | Doses: 1.56, 3.12, 6.25, 12.5, 25, 50, and 100 | Significantly reduced cell proliferation in cancer cells [ | |
| Ethyl acetate | Extract | Fruit | Doses: 1.56, 3.12, 6.25, 12.5, 25, 50, and 100 | Significantly reduced cell proliferation in cancer cells [ | ||
| Methanol | Extract | Leaf | Doses: 1.56, 3.12, 6.25, 12.5, 25, 50, and 100 | |||
| ——— | Extract | Seed | Doses: 50, 100, 150, and 200 | Inhibited the growth of cancer cells [ | ||
| MDA-MB-231-pcDNA3 | Methanol | Extract | Pericarp | IC50 > 80 | Cytotoxic activity [ | |
| Methanol | Extract | Leaf | ||||
| Methanol | Extract | seed | ||||
| MDA-MB-231- | Methanol | Extract | Pericarp | |||
| Methanol | Extract | Seed | ||||
| Methanol | Extract | Leaf | ||||
| ——— | Ethanolic component (7,12-dimethylbenzeneanthracene (DMBA)) | Extract | Fruit | Three groups of albino mice treated intragastrically by gavage for 6 weeks: 20 mg/mL/week of DMBA + 200 mg/mL/day of extract, 20 mg/mL/week of DMBA + 100 mg/mL/day of extract and 20 mg/mL/week of DMBA + 50 mg/mL/day of extract [ | Prevented DMBA-induced DNA damage [ | |
| Leaves boiled in water | Beverage | Leaf | A 66-year-old female who has been diagnosed with cancer used to boil 10–12 dry leaves in water for 5–7 minutes, 8 oz PO daily at that time | Her metastatic breast cancer is still stable after 5 years on graviola and Xeloda after previously progressing on multiple lines of therapy [ | ||
| MDA-MB-468 | ——— | Extract | Leaf | Doses: 5, 25, 50, or 100 | Inhibited EGFR-overexpression and EGFR mRNA expression. Induced cell cycle arrest at the G0/G1 phase. Induced apoptosis through caspase-3 activation | |
| MDA | Ethanol | Extract | Leaf | IC50 = 248.77 | Cytotoxic activity [ | |
| SKBR3 | Ethanol | Extract | Leaf | IC50 = 202.33 | ||
| T47D | Ethanol | Extract | Fruit | IC50 = 17.15 | Induced cytotoxicity and apoptosis [ | |
| Bladder cancer | ECV-304 | Ethanol | Extract | Twing | 0.1–10 mg/mL | Cytotoxic activity against cancer cells |
| Prostate cancer | PC-3 | Muricin J, K, or L | AGEs | Leaf | Dose: 20 | Antiproliferative activity against human cancer cells [ |
| Annomuricin E | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.46 × 10−1 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricapentocin | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 4.50 × 10−1 | |||
| Annohexocin | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 0.0195 | Significant cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Annopentocin A | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.14 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Annopentocin B | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 2.12 × 10−1 | |||
| Annopentocin C | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 2.28 × 10−1 | |||
|
| AGEs | Leaf | ED50 = 1.32 | |||
| Murihexocin A | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.71 × 10−2 | Significant cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Murihexocin B | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 0.126 | |||
| Murihexocin C | AGE | Fruit | ED50 = 0.86 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricoreacin | ED50 = 0.025 | |||||
| Muricin M | AGE | fruit | Dose: 20 | Antiproliferative activities against human prostate cancer cells [ | ||
| Muricin N | AGEs | Leaf | ||||
| Muricenin | ||||||
| ——— | Water | Extract | Leaf | F344 male rats (≈200 g) were gavaged 30 mg/mL (10 rats) and 300 mg/mL (10 rats) and fed ad libitum alongside 10 control rats for two months | Reduced prostate size | |
| Colorectal cancer | HT-29 | Annomuricin A | AGE | Leaf | ED50 > 1.0 | Cytotoxic activity [ |
| Annomuricin B | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 4.35 × 10−1 | |||
| Annomuricin C | AGE | Leaf | —–— | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricatocin C | ||||||
| Annomuricin E | AGE | Leaf | Doses: 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16 | Induced toxicity against cancer cells [ | ||
| Muricapentocin | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 7.10 × 10−2 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Annomutacin | AGE | Leaf | ED50 > 1.0 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| (2,4- | AGE | Leaf | ED50 > 1.0 | |||
| Annohexocin | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 0.78 | Significant cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricatocin A | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.56 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricatocin B | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.66 | |||
| Annopentocin A | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.63 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Annopentocin B | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.64 | |||
| Annopentocin C | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.24 | |||
|
| AGEs | Leaf | ED50 < 10−2 | |||
| Murihexocin A | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 3.00 | Significant cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Murihexocin B | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 2.30 | |||
| Murihexocin C | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 1.3 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricoreacin | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 0.57 | |||
| Muricatacin | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 14.0 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Isoannonacin | AGE | Seed | IC50 < 10−3 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Isoannonacin-10-one | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 1.8 × 103 | |||
| Goniothalamicin | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 1.1 × 10−3 | |||
| Gigantetrocin | AGE | Seed and/or leaf | IC50 < 103 | |||
| Gigantetrocin A | AGE | Seed | ED50 < 10−8 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricatetrocin A | AGE | Seed and/or leaf | ED50 < 10−8 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricatetrocin B | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 2.8 × 10−5 | |||
| Gigantetrocin B | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 4.1 × 10−5 | |||
|
| AGE | Seed | IC50 = 1.0 × 10−8 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
|
| AGE | Seed | IC50 = 9.0 × 10−4 | |||
|
| AGE | Seed | IC50 = 5.3 × 10−3 | |||
| Arianacin | AGE | Leaf | IC50 = 4.4 | |||
| Javoricin | AGE | Leaf | IC50 = 1.8 | |||
| Hexane | Extract | Leaf | Doses: 10, 20, 40, and 80 | Significantly reduced cell proliferation in cancer cells [ | ||
| Ethyl acetate | Extract | Leaf | Doses | Induced significant cytotoxic effects, cell cycle arrest at G1 phase, and apoptosis. Treatment also caused excessive accumulation of ROS followed by disruption of MMP, cytochrome c leakage, and activation of the initiator and executioner caspases in cancer cells. In addition, it upregulated Bax and downregulated Bcl-2 proteins. Furthermore, treatment conspicuously blocked the migration and invasion of cancer cells [ | ||
| Methanol | Extract | Leaf | Doses: 10, 20, 40, and 80 | Significantly reduced the cell proliferation in cancer cells [ | ||
| HCT-116 | Hexane | Extract | Leaf | Doses: 10, 20, 40, and 80 | ||
| Ethyl acetate | Extract | Leaf | Doses: 10, 20, 40, and 80 | In cancer cells, induced significant cytotoxic effects, cell cycle arrest at the G1 phase, and apoptosis as well as excessive accumulation of ROS followed by disruption of MMP, cytochrome c leakage, and activation of the initiator and executioner caspases. It also upregulated Bax and downregulated Bcl-2 protein. Furthermore, treatment conspicuously blocked the migration and invasion of cancer cells [ | ||
| Methanol | Extract | Seed | Doses: 10, 20, 40, and 80 | Significantly reduced cell proliferation in cancer cells [ | ||
| HCT116 ( | Methanol | Extract | Pericarp | IC50 > 100 | Cytotoxic activity [ | |
| Methanol | Extract | Leaf | IC50 > 80 | |||
| Methanol | Extract | Seed | ||||
| HCT116 ( | Methanol | Extract | Pericarp | |||
| Methanol | Extract | Leaf | ||||
| Methanol | Extract | Leaf | ||||
| ——— | Ethanolic | Extract | Leaf | 300 mg/kg into Wistar albino rats | Showed potent anticancer activity through apoptosis and reduction of aberrant crypt foci formation [ | |
| Ethanol | Extract | Leaf | 100 mg/kg body weight/4 weeks are administrated into Wistar rats | In a rat model of | ||
| COLO-205 | 96% Ethanol [ | Extract | Leaf | Doses | Enhanced proapoptotic caspase-3 marker activity [ | |
| DLD-1 | Ethanol soluble fraction leaf water extract contains 0.36% acetogenin ( | Extract | Leaf | Patients consumed either 300 mg of extract, or maltose as a placebo, in the form of a capsule after breakfast. | Ex vivo and clinical studies showed higher cytotoxicity in the supplemented group compared with the placebo group [ | |
| HTC-8 | (+)-(3S,6S,7R,8S)-Periconone A | Fungal strain Extract | Leaf | Doses: 0.01–10 | Cytotoxic activity [ | |
| (−)-(1R,4R,6S,7S)-2-Caren-4,8-olide | Fungal strain Extract | Leaf | ||||
| Lung cancer | A549 | Annomuricin A | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 3.30 × 10−1 | Cytotoxic activity [ |
| Annomuricin B | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.59 × 10−1 | |||
| Annomuricin C | AGE | Leaf | —–— | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricatocin C | AGE | Leaf | ||||
| Annomuricin E | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.12 × 10−1 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricapentocin | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.93 × 10−1 | |||
| Annomutacin | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.57 × 10−1 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| (2,4- | AGEs | Leaf | ED50 = 1.74 × 10−1 | |||
| Annohexocin | AGEs | Leaf | ED50 = 0.34 | Significant cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricatocin A | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 7.55 × 10−2 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricatocin B | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 3.34 × 10−1 | |||
| Annopentocin A | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.71 × 10−1 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Annopentocin B | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 2.74 × 10−2 | |||
| Annopentocin C | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 2.06 × 10−2 | |||
|
| AGEs | Leaf | ED50 < 10−2 | |||
| Murihexocin A | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.32 | Significant cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Murihexocin B | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.08 | |||
| Murihexocin C | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 1.1 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricoreacin | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 0.23 | |||
| Muricatacin | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 23.3 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Isoannonacin | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 9.6 × 10−3 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Isoannonacin-10-one | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 9.7 × 103 | |||
| Goniothalamicin | AGE | Seed and/or leaf | IC50 = 8.0 × 10−3 | |||
| Gigantetrocin | AGE | Seed and/or leaf | IC50 < 10−3 | |||
| Gigantetrocin A | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 8.1 × 10−3 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricatetrocin A | AGE | Seed and/or leaf | ED50 = 1.4 × 10−1 | |||
| Muricatetrocin B | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 4.9 × 10−1 | |||
| Gigantetrocin B | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 2.5 × 10−1 | |||
|
| AGE | Seed | IC50 = 2.3 × 10−1 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
|
| AGE | Seed | IC50 = 3.5 × 10−1 | |||
|
| AGE | Seed | IC50 = 1.3 × 10−1 | |||
| Arianacin | AGE | Leaf | IC50 = 4.7 × 10−3 | |||
| Javoricin | AGE | Leaf | IC50 = 1.7 × 10−2 | |||
| Ethyl acetate component | Extract | Leaf | Doses: 1.56, 3.12, 6.25, 12.5, 25, 50, and 100 | Selective cytotoxic effect against cancer cells and significant lactate dehydrogenase leakage and phosphatidylserine externalization demonstrated by fluorescence analysis. Treatment also elevated ROS formation, while attenuating MMP via upregulation of Bax and downregulation of Bcl-2. This was accompanied by cytochrome c release to the cytosol, which triggered activation of caspase-9 and caspase-3. These proapoptotic effects were accompanied by cell cycle arrest at the G0/G1 phase and suppression of NF- | ||
| Hexane | Extract | Leaf | Doses: 1.56, 3.12, 6.25, 12.5, 25, 50, and 100 | Significantly reduced cell proliferation in cancer cells [ | ||
| Methanol | Extract | Leaf | Doses: 1.56, 3.12, 6.25, 12.5, 25, 50, and 100 | |||
| (+)-(3S,6S,7R,8S)-Periconone A | Fungal strain Extract | Leaf | Doses: 0.01–10 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| (−)-(1R,4R,6S,7S)-2-Caren-4,8-olide | Fungal strain Extract | Leaf | ||||
| H-460 | Ethanol | Extract | Tree/Leaf | IC50 < 0.22 | Cytotoxic activity [ | |
| Ethanol (95%) | Extract | Pericarp | GI50 = 4.0 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| NCI-H292 | Methanol | Extract | Pericarp | IC50: 24.94 ± 0.74 | Antiproliferative and cytotoxic activities towards cancer cells [ | |
| Leukemia (hematological malignancies) | U-937 | Annonacin A | AGE | Pericarp | Doses: 0.1, 0.46, and 1.0 mg/mL | Cytotoxic activity [ |
| Annomuricin A | AGE | Pericarp | ||||
| Methanol | Extract | Pericarp | MEC > 1 mg/mL | |||
| Hexane | Extract | Leaf | MEC = 1 mg/mL | |||
| Ethyle acetate | Extract | Stem | MEC = 0.1 mg/mL | |||
| Ethyle acetate | Extract | Stem | LC50 = 7.8 ± 0.3 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Ethyle acetate | Extract | Stem | IC50 = 10.5 ± 2.3 and/or 28.1 ± 13.0 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Methanol | Extract | Stem | IC50 = 60.9 ± 10.4 and/or 38.5 ± 8.6 | |||
| Hexane | Extract | Stem | IC50 = 18.2 ± 0.8 and/or 15.7 ± 5.1 | |||
| K562 | Ethanol | Extract | Leaf | Doses | Showed cytotoxicity | |
| HL-60 | Ethanol | Extract | Root | IC50 = 14 ± 2.4 | Induced apoptosis through loss of MMP and inhibited proliferation via G0/G1 cell cycle arrest [ | |
| Ethanol | Extract | Fruit/pericarp | IC50 = 49 ± 3.2 | |||
| Ethanol | Extract | Leaf | IC50 = 9 ± 0.8 | |||
| CCRF-CEM | Methanol | Extract | Seed | IC50 = 4.58 ± 0.25 | Induced cytotoxic, apoptosis, and cell cycle arrest [ | |
| Methanol | Extract | Leaf | IC50 = 0.57 ± 0.02 | |||
| Methanol | Extract | Seed | IC50 = 0.36 ± 0.03 | |||
| CEM/ADR5000 | Methanol | Extract | Pericarp | IC50 = 5.25 ± 0.38 | ||
| Methanol | Extract | Leaf | IC50 = 6.65 ± 0.22 | |||
| Methanol | Extract | Leaf | IC50 = 23.70 ± 1.64 | |||
| Renal cancer | A498 | Annomuricin E | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.41 | Cytotoxic activity [ |
| Muricapentocin | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.72 | |||
| Annohexocin | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 2.36 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Annopentocin A | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 6.07 × 10−1 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Annopentocin B | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 3.79 × 10−1 | |||
| Annopentocin C | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 2.58 × 10−1 | |||
|
| AGEs | Leaf | ED50 = 1.22 × 10−1 | |||
| Murihexocin A | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 2.51 | Significant cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Murihexocin B | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 4.92 | |||
| Murihexocin C | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 2.5 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricoreacin | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 0.71 | |||
| Pancreatic cancer | PACA | Annomuricin E | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 2.42 × 10−2 | Cytotoxic activity [ |
| Muricapentocin | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 5.03 × 10−2 | |||
| PACA-2 | Annohexocin | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 0.77 | Significant cytotoxic activity [ | |
| Annopentocin A | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 3.58 × 10−2 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Annopentocin B | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 1.62 × 10−1 | |||
| Annopentocin C | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 4.28 × 10−1 | |||
|
| AGEs | Leaf | ED50 < 10−2 | |||
| Murihexocin A | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 9.73 × 10−2 | Significant cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Murihexocin B | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 0.413 | |||
| Murihexocin C | AGE | Leaf and/or stem | ED50 = 0.49 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricoreacin | AGE | Leaf and/or stem | ED50 = 2.3 | |||
| FG/COLO357 | Powder without binders or fillers (capsule contents is suspended in DMSO (100 mg/mL DMSO) | Extract | Leaf | Doses: 10–200 | Induced cytotoxicity and necrosis by inhibiting cellular metabolism. In addition, it downregulated the expression of molecules related to hypoxia and glycolysis (i.e., HIF-1 | |
| CD18/HPAF | DMSO | Extract | Leaf | Doses: 10–200 | Induced cytotoxicity and necrosis and inhibited cellular metabolism. In addition, it downregulates the expression of molecules related to hypoxia and glycolysis (i.e., HIF-1 | |
| Capan-1 | Hexane | Extract | Seed | IC25~7.8–8 | Inhibited cell proliferation and induced mild cytotoxicity in cancer cells [ | |
| DMSO | Commercialized Extract | Seed | IC25~0.9–1.0 | |||
| Hepatic cancer | Hep G2 | Muricin H | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 9.51 × 10−2 | Exhibited significant activity in |
| Muricin I | AGE | Leaf | IC50 = 5.09 × 10−2 | |||
|
| AGE | Leaf | IC50 = 2.98 × 10−1 | |||
|
| AGE | Seed | IC50 = 1.65 × 10−1 | |||
| Annocatalin | AGE | Leaf | IC50 = 5.70 | |||
| Annocatacin A | AGE | Leaf | IC50 = 12.11 | Significant | ||
| Annocatacin B | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 3.35 × 10−2 | |||
| Methanol | Extract | Pericarp | IC50 > 80 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Methanol | Extract | Seed | ||||
| Methanol | Extract | Seed | ||||
| Muricin A | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 5.04 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricin B | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 1.78 | |||
| Muricin C | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 4.99 | |||
| Muricin D | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 6.60 × 10−4 | |||
| Muricin E | AGE | Seed | ——— | |||
| Muricin F | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 4.28 × 10−2 | |||
| Muricin G | AGE | Seed | ——— | |||
| Muricatetrocins A & B | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 4.95 × 10−2 | |||
| Longifolicin | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 4.04 × 10−4 | |||
| Corossolin | AGE | Leaf | IC50 = 3.53 × 10−1 | |||
| Corossolone | AGE | Leaf | IC50 = 4.80 × 10−1 | |||
| Hexane | Extract | Leaf | Doses: 1.56, 3.12, 6.25, 12.5, 25, 50, and 100 | Significantly reduced cell proliferation in cancer cells [ | ||
| Ethyl acetate | Extract | Seed | Doses: 1.56, 3.12, 6.25, 12.5, 25, 50, and 100 | |||
| Methanol | Extract | Seed | Doses: 1.56, 3.12, 6.25, 12.5, 25, 50, and 100 | |||
| Hep 2,2,15 (a Hep G2 cell line transfected with HBV) | Muricin H | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 1.18 × 10−2 | Exhibited significant activity in | |
| Muricin I | AGE | Leaf | IC50 = 2.22 × 10−1 | |||
|
| AGE | Leaf | IC50 = 1.62 × 10−2 | |||
|
| AGE | Leaf | IC50 = 4.76 × 10−2 | |||
| Annocatalin | AGE | Leaf | IC50 = 3.48 × 10−3 | |||
| Annocatacin A | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 8.17 × 10−1 | Significant | ||
| Annocatacin B | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 2.22 × 10−1 | |||
| Muricin A | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 5.13 × 10−3 | Cytotoxic activity [ | ||
| Muricin B | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 4.29 × 10−3 | |||
| Muricin C | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 3.87 × 10−3 | |||
| Muricin D | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 4.80 × 10−2 | |||
| Muricin E | AGE | Seed | ——— | |||
| Muricin F | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 3.86 × 10−3 | |||
| Muricin G | AGE | Seed | ——— | |||
| Muricatetrocins A & B | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 4.83 × 10−3 | |||
| Longifolicin | AGE | Seed | IC50 = 4.90 × 10−3 | |||
| Corossolin | AGE | Leaf | IC50 = 2.34 × 10−1 | |||
| Corossolone | AGE | Leaf | IC50 = 2.84 × 10−1 | |||
| Bel-7402 | (+)-(3S,6S,7R,8S)-Periconone A | fungal strain Extract | Seed and/or Leaf | Doses: 0.01–10 | Cytotoxic activity [ | |
| (−)-(1R,4R,6S,7S)-2-Caren-4,8-olide | fungal strain Extract | Seed | ||||
| Oral cancer | KB | Corossolone | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 0.1 | Toxicity against oral cancer cells |
| Corossolin | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 0.003 | |||
| Solamin | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 0.3 | Toxicity against oral cancer cells | ||
| Murisolin | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 0.1 | |||
| Annonacinone | AGE | Seed | ED50 = 0.01 | |||
| Annonacin | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 0.0001 | |||
| Vinblastine | AGE | Leaf | ED50 = 0.01 | |||
| Stomach cancer | C-678 | Ethanol | Extract | Leaf | IC50 < 0.22 | Cytotoxic activity [ |
| Melanoma | A375 | H2O | Extract | Leaf | IC50 > 500 | Cytotoxic activity [ |
| Ethanol | Extract | Leaf | IC50 = 20 ± 6 | |||
| Pentane | Extract | Leaf | IC50 = 140 ± 25 | |||
| MDA-MB-435S |
| Extract | Leaf | IC50 = 29.2 | Significant cytotoxic activity [ | |
| Skin cancer | ——— | 80% aqueous ethanol | Extract | Leaf | 30 mg/kg body weight into ICR mice | Suppressed tumor initiation as well as tumor promotion even at lower dosage [ |
| Glioma | SF-268 | Ethanol (95%) | Extract | Seed | GI50 = 8.5 | Cytotoxic activity [ |
| U87MG | Methanol | Extract | Pericarp | IC50 > 80 | Cytotoxic activity [ | |
| Methanol | Extract | Leaf | ||||
| Methanol | Extract | Seed | ||||
| U87MG.Δ | Methanol | Extract | Pericarp | |||
| Methanol | Extract | Leaf | ||||
| Methanol | Extract | Leaf | ||||
| Cervical cancer | HeLa | Ethyl acetate | Extract | Leaf | LC50 of (2000 | Induced apoptosis [ |
| Ethanol-distillate water | Extract | Leaf | LC50 of (2000 | |||
| Chloroform | Extract | Leaf | LC50 of (2000 | |||
|
| Extract | Leaf | LC50 of (2000 | |||
| HEp-2 (now HeLa) | Methanol | Extract | Leaf | IC50 = 54.92 ± 1.44 | Antiproliferative and cytotoxic activities [ | |
| Ehrlich ascite carcinoma | EACC | Ethanol | Extract | Leaf | IC50 = 335.85 | Cytotoxic activity |
| Gastric cancer | BGC-823 | (+)-(3S,6S,7R,8S)-Periconone A | Fungal strain Extract | Leaf | Doses: 0.01–10 | Cytotoxic activity [ |
| (−)-(1R,4R,6S,7S)-2-Caren-4,8-olide | Fungal strain Extract | Leaf | ||||
| Ovarian cancer | A2780 | (+)-(3S,6S,7R,8S)-Periconone A | Fungal strain Extract | Leaf | ||
| (−)-(1R,4R,6S,7S)-2-Caren-4,8-olide | Fungal strain Extract | Tree/Leaf | ||||
| Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSC) | SCC-25 | H2O | Extract | Leaf | Doses: 2.5–160 | Displayed promising cytotoxic activity and inhibition of cell proliferation via G2M cell cycle arrest [ |
ED50: median effective dose; GI50: a concentration for 50% of maximal inhibition of cell proliferation; IC25: a concentration causing 50% inhibition; IC50: a concentration causing 50% inhibition; LC50: a concentration causing 50% cell death; LD: lethal dose; MIC: minimum inhibitory concentration.
Figure 3Overview of the molecular actions of A. muricata (graviola) leading to anticancer and other health benefits. Extracts of the different aerial parts of A. muricata using several solvents have been shown to induce cytotoxicity, cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, and necrosis and, conversely, to inhibit cancer cell motility, migration, metastasis, and proliferation. Other reported health benefits include antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and immunomodulatory activities. Our current understanding is that graviola components modulate several cellular processes including inhibition of signaling pathways downstream of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), with others causing downregulation of phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase (PI3K/Akt), RAS, NF-κB, and JAK/STAT [31]. Further actions include inhibition of HIF-1α, GLUT1, and GLUT4 [28]; proinflammatory cytokine expression (inflammation); and generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) via upregulatoin of enzyme systems like catalase (CAT), superoxide dismutase (SOD), and heme-oxygenase (HO-1) expression [39, 54, 89, 124].