| Literature DB >> 31382529 |
Bahare Salehi1, Marcello Iriti2, Sara Vitalini2, Hubert Antolak3, Ewelina Pawlikowska3, Dorota Kręgiel3, Javad Sharifi-Rad4, Sunday I Oyeleye5,6, Adedayo O Ademiluyi5, Katarzyna Czopek7, Mariola Staniak7, Luísa Custódio8, Ericsson Coy-Barrera9, Antonio Segura-Carretero10,11, María de la Luz Cádiz-Gurrea12,13, Raffaele Capasso14, William C Cho15, Ana M L Seca16,17.
Abstract
Euphorbia genus (Euphorbiaceae family), which is the third largest genus of angiosperm plants comprising ca. 2000 recognized species, is used all over the world in traditional medicine, especially in the traditional Chinese medicine. Members of this taxa are promptly recognizable by their specialized inflorescences and latex. In this review, an overview of Euphorbia-derived natural products such as essential oils, extracts, and pure compounds, active in a broad range of biological activities, and with potential usages in health maintenance, is described. The chemical composition of essential oils from Euphorbia species revealed the presence of more than 80 phytochemicals, mainly oxygenated sesquiterpenes and sesquiterpenes hydrocarbons, while Euphorbia extracts contain secondary metabolites such as sesquiterpenes, diterpenes, sterols, flavonoids, and other polyphenols. The extracts and secondary metabolites from Euphorbia plants may act as active principles of medicines for the treatment of many human ailments, mainly inflammation, cancer, and microbial infections. Besides, Euphorbia-derived products have great potential as a source of bioactive extracts and pure compounds, which can be used to promote longevity with more health.Entities:
Keywords: Euphorbia; anti-inflammation; anticancer; antimicrobial; bioactivity; essential oils; extracts; phytochemicals; terpenoids
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31382529 PMCID: PMC6723572 DOI: 10.3390/biom9080337
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Chemical composition and biological activities of Euphorbia essential oils.
| Species | Origin | Raw Material | Extraction Method | Main Components a (%) | Most Relevant Biological Activities | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Greece | Inflorescences | Steam distillation | Phytol (28.3), phytol acetate (9.3), β-caryophyllene (7.5) | not evaluated | [ | |
| Greece | Inflorescences | Steam distillation | Germacrene D (30.0), heptacosane (12.7), β-caryophyllene (10.0), tricosane (6.5), pentacosane (6.0) | not evaluated | [ | |
| Greece | Inflorescences | Steam distillation | Nonanal (22.8), phytol (13.5), pentacosane (8.5), heptacosane (7.4), palmitic acid (5.7), nonacosane (5.6) | not evaluated | [ | |
| Venezuela | Leaves | Hydro-distillation | β-Caryophyllene (39.3), germacrene-D (21.5%), α-copaene (9.3), α-humulene (5.2) | not evaluated | [ | |
| Greece | Inflorescences | Steam distillation | Heptacosane (10.5), pentacosane (6.0), 4-terpineol (5.5), tricosane (5.0) | not evaluated | [ | |
| Syria | Aerial parts | Hydro-distillation | 1,8-Cineole (18.87), linalool (13.61), carvacrol (13.32), ( | Radical scavenging activity (EC50 = 0.35 µg/mL) lower than BHA (EC50 = 0.135 µg/mL) | [ | |
| China | Roots | Steam distillation | Eudesmol (18.22), | Radical scavenging activity (IC50 = 57.2 µg/mL) similar to ascorbic acid (IC50 = 63.1 µg/mL) but lower than BHT (IC50 = 26.1 µg/mL) | [ | |
| Italy | Inflorescences | Steam distillation | Carvacrol (61.55), carvon (9.22), β-caryophyllene (5.80)/geraniol (59.65), β-caryophyllene (9.05) | not evaluated | [ | |
| Turkey | Aerial parts | Hydro-distillation | Arachidic acid (32), hexatriacontane (8.7), mint furanone (8.4), palmitic acid (8.0), tetratetracontane (6.2), octadecane (5.6), α-silenene (5.2) | Anti-lipid peroxidation activity (IC50 = 14.8 µg/mL) similar to α-tocopherol, but much lower radical scavenging activity than BHT. | [ | |
| Cameroon | Leaves | Steam distillation | Caryophyllene oxide (14.16), 2-pentadecanone (13.78), camphor (9.41), phytol (5.75) | not evaluated | [ | |
| Iran | Aerial parts | Hydro-distillation | α-Bisabolol (31.2), | not evaluated | [ | |
| Greece | Inflorescences | Steam distillation | Phytol (21.2), β-caryophyllene (10.0), behenic acid methyl ester (8.1), myristic acid methyl ester (5.5) | not evaluated | [ | |
| Turkey | Aerial parts | Hydro-distillation | β-Cubebene (19.3), palmitic acid (12.2), caryophyllene oxide (11.7), τ-elemene (9.3), spathulenol (9.3), phytol (6.9), hexahydrofarnesly acetone (5.3) | Low antioxidant and antiacetylcholinesterase activity, moderate butyrylcholinesterase and similar anti-urease activity to thiourea. | [ | |
| Nigeria | Leaves | Hydro-distillation | 3,7,12,15-Tetramethyl-2-hexadecen-1-ol (12.30), stearic acid (11.21), oleic acid (10.42), linoleic acid (8.97), 1,2-epoxy-cyclododecane (7.91), 13-tetradece-11-yn-1-ol (7.83), 7,10-hexadecadienal (7.62), 1,2,15,16-diepoxyhexadecane (6.37), phytol (6.32), 2-monopalmitin (5.43) | Toxic to brine shrimp larvae (LC50 = 21.7 µg/mL). Radical scavenging activity similar to ascorbic acid, lower than BHA but higher than α-tocopherol at 250 µg/mL. | [ | |
| Nigeria | Stems | Hydro-distillation | Stearic acid (11.21), oleic acid (10.42), linoleic acid (8.97), 1,2-epoxy-cyclododecane (7.91), 13-tetradece-11-yn-1-ol (7.83), 7,10-hexadecadienal (7.62), 1,2,15,16-diepoxyhexadecane (6.37), phytol (6.32), 2-monopalmitin (5.43), 2-aminoethoxyethynediyl methyl ester (5.40) | Very toxic to brine shrimp larvae (LC50 = 8.94 µg/mL). Radical scavenging activity similar to ascorbic acid, lower than BHA but higher than α-tocopherol at 250 µg/mL. | [ | |
| Egypt | Aerial parts | Hydro-distillation | 1,8-Cineole (32.0), camphor (16.5), β-elemene (5.9 ) | Radical scavenging activity (IC50 325.3 µL/L) lower than ascorbic acid (204.4 µL/L). | [ | |
| Lagos | Leaves | Hydro-distillation | Phytol and its isomeric forms (34.8), 6,10,14-trimethyl-2-pentadecanone (12.37), hexadecanal (7.63), palmitic acid (6.26) | not evaluated | [ | |
| Turkey | Aerial parts | Hydro-distillation | Tetratetracontane (42.7), hexatriacontane (12), mint furanone (6.0) | Anti-lipid peroxidation activity (IC50 = 14.8 µg/mL) similar to α-tocopherol. Lower radical scavenging activity than BHT but higher than | [ | |
| China | Aerial parts | Hydro-distillation | Acorenone B (16.72), (+)-cycloisosativene (14.94), 3β-hydroxy-5α-androstane (10.62), β-cedrene (8.40), copaene (7.37), palmitic acid (5.68) | Cytotoxic activity against Caco-2 cell line (IC50 = 78.32 µg/mL), antibacterial activity against | [ | |
| China | Roots | Hydro-distillation | Acorenone B (25.80), (+)-cycloisosativene (12.40), β-cedrene (7.98), copaene (6.29), 3β-hydroxy-5α-androstane (5.52) | Cytotoxic activity against Caco-2 cell line (IC50 = 11.86 µg/mL), antibacterial activity against | [ | |
| China | Roots | Steam distillation | Agarospirol (49.23), hedycargol (20.66) | not evaluated | [ | |
| India | Aerial parts | Hydro-distillation | Phytol (5.75), | not evaluated | [ | |
| Greece | Inflorescences | Steam distillation | Heneicosane (13.8), heptacosane (12.7), β-caryophyllene (9.4), linalool (6.7), pentacosane (6.5) | not evaluated | [ | |
| Egypt | Aerial parts | Hydro-distillation | Valencene (16.01), (+) spathulenol (15.41), (-)-caryophyllene oxide (10.50), limonene (7.66) | not evaluated | [ | |
| Egypt | Aerial parts | Microwave-assisted | Butyl hydroxyl toluene (25.58), β-eudesmol (13.67), 6- | not evaluated | [ | |
| Iran | Aerial parts | Hydro-distillation | Elemol (57.5), β-caryophyllene (8.1%), caryophyllene oxide (7.8%) | not evaluated | [ | |
| India | Aerial parts | Steam distillation | Palmitic acid (33.03), phytol (10.367), myristic acid (6.58) | not evaluated | [ | |
| Bangladesh | Aerial parts | Steam distillation | Eugenol (22.52), phenyl ethyl alcohol (14.63), 3-pentanol (9.22), caryophyllene oxide (7.73), isoeugenol (7.32), pentadecanol (5.14), spathulenol (5.11) | Radical scavenging activity (DPPH IC50 = 13.67 µg/mL) higher than BHA (IC50 = 18.26 µg/mL). | [ |
a Compounds with content higher than 5%.
Figure 1Chemical structures of the constituents of Euphorbia essential oil, each one with a content exceeding 25%.
Antibacterial and antifungal activity of Euphorbia extracts.
| Tested Extract | Activity against | Highest Level of Activity * | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Water | Hexane extract against | [ | ||
| Methanol | Extract of | [ | ||
| Chloroform | Chloroform extract against | [ | ||
| Acetone | Chloroform extract against | [ | ||
| Ethanol | Extract of | [ | ||
| Ethanol | Against | [ | ||
| Hexane | Ethanol extract against | [ | ||
| Ethanol | Ethanol extract against | [ |
* Express as diameter of inhibition zone (mm), as minimum inhibitory concentration, MIC or as minimum bactericidal concentration (MBC) (µg/mL). When available, the antimicrobial activity of the reference compound is presented.
Figure 2Chemical structures of in vitro bioactive Euphorbia compounds.
Figure 3Chemical structures of some in vivo bioactive Euphorbia compounds.