| Literature DB >> 32423415 |
Boris D Bekono1, Fidele Ntie-Kang2,3,4, Pascal Amoa Onguéné5, Lydia L Lifongo6, Wolfgang Sippl7, Karin Fester8, Luc C O Owono9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: African Traditional Medicine (ATM) is used for the healthcare of about 80% of the rural populations of the continent of Africa. The practices of ATM make use of plant-products, which are known to contain plant-based secondary metabolites or natural products (NPs), likely to play key roles in drug discovery, particularly as lead compounds. For various reasons, including resistance of strains of Plasmodium to known anti-malarial drugs, local African populations often resort to plant-based treatments and/or a combination of this and standard anti-malarial regimens. Emphasis has been laid in this review to present the anti-malarial virtue of the most recently published phytochemicals or natural products, which have been tested by in vitro and in vivo assays.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; Malaria; Medicinal plants; Natural products; Traditional medicine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32423415 PMCID: PMC7236213 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-020-03231-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Summary of testing methodologies and parasite strains described in this report
| Murine (in vivo) models | Strains | Parasite name | Origin | Assay description | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CQ-sensitive | NK 173 | Not reported | Not reported | ||
| ANKA | Not reported | Not reported | [ | ||
| Not reported | Not reported | ||||
| CQ-sensitive | 3D7 | Not reported | Parasite lactate dehydrogenase (pLDH) assay | [ | |
| Not reported | Parasite growth inhibition assay | [ | |||
| Not reported | Translation inhibitory assay | [ | |||
| D6 | Sierra Leone | Incorporated G-3H hypoxanthine assay | [ | ||
| Parasite lactate dehydrogenase (pLDH) assay | [ | ||||
| Non-radioactive Malaria SYBR Green I assay | [ | ||||
| Modified non-radioactive Malaria SYBR Green I assay | [ | ||||
| D10 | Not reported | pLDH assay | [ | ||
| F32 | Tanzania | Not reported | |||
| FCA20 | Ghana | Not reported | |||
| K1 | Thailand | Modified [3H]-hypoxanthine incorporation assay and [3H]-hypoxanthine incorporation assay | [ | ||
| NF54 | Not reported | [3H]-hypoxanthine incorporation assay | [ | ||
| CQ-resistant | Dd2 | Not reported | Non-radioactive Malaria SYBR Green I assay | [ | |
| FcM29 | Cameroon | Not reported | |||
| FcB1 | Colombia | [3H]-hypoxanthine incorporation assay | [ | ||
| K1 | Thailand | Modified [3H]-hypoxanthine incorporation assay and [3H]-hypoxanthine incorporation assay | [ | ||
| W2 | Indochina | Modified non-radioactive Malaria SYBR Green I assay | [ | ||
| Incorporated G-3H hypoxanthine assay | [ | ||||
| Non-radioactive Malaria SYBR Green I assay | [ | ||||
| NF54 | [3H]-hypoxanthine incorporation assay | [ | |||
| CQ- and pyrimethamine-resistant | K1 | Thailand | Modified [3H]-hypoxanthine incorporation assay and [3H]-hypoxanthine incorporation assay | [ | |
| NF54 | Thailand | [3H]-hypoxanthine incorporation assay | [ | ||
| Multidrug-resistant | Dd2 | Not reported | [3H]-hypoxanthine incorporation assay | [ | |
| K1 | Thailand | Parasite lactate dehydrogenase (pLDH) assay | [ | ||
| NF54 | Not reported | [3H]-hypoxanthine incorporation assay | [ | ||
| W2 | Indochina | [3H]-hypoxanthine incorporation assay | [ | ||
| W2mef | Not reported | [3H]-hypoxanthine incorporation assay | [ | ||
Summary of alkaloids
| Compound subclass | Isolated metabolites | Plasmodial strain (activities) | Plant species (Family), Taxon IDb | Part of the plant studied | Place of harvest (Locality, Country) | Author, references |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aporphines | K1 (8.24 and 2.90 μM, respectively) | Leaves | Amani Nature Reserve, Tanzania | Malebo et al. [ | ||
| Furoquinolines | FcB1 (from 162.47 to 298.16 μM) | Fruits and leaves | Kamwenge district, Uganda | Lacroix et al. [ | ||
| Dd2 (IC50 = 35 μM) | Stem bark | Antsasaka forest of Moramanga, Madagascar | Rasamison et al. [ | |||
| Indoles | 3D7 (from 0.41 to 110.58 μM) | Stem bark | Bertoua, Cameroon | Tchinda et al. [ | ||
| FCA20 (0.617 μM) | Roots | Kasongo-Lunda, DR Congo | Beaufay et al. [ | |||
| W2 (0.085 μM) | ||||||
| Indolosesquiterpenes | NF54 (7.6 μM and 29.1 μM, respectively) | Stem bark | Mount Kala, Cameroon | Kouam et al. [ | ||
| Naphthylisoquinolines | NF54 (0.043 and 0.055 μM, respectively) | Leaves | Mbandaka, DR Congo | Lombe et al. [ | ||
| NF54 (from 0.090 to 6.54 μM) | Leaves and root bark | Bambange, DR Congo | Li et al. [ | |||
| K1 (0.228 μM for compound | ||||||
| NF54 (from 0.84 to 22.2 μM) | Twigs and leaves | Mbandaka, DR Congo | Tshitenge et al. [ | |||
| K1 (from 1.4 to 8.2 μM) | ||||||
| Protoberberines | K1 (from 0.22 to 0.71 μM) | Leaves | Amani Nature Reserve, Tanzania | Malebo et al. [ | ||
| K1 (IC50 = 318.66 μM) | Stem | Tikrom, near Kumasi, Ghana | Gbedema et al. [ | |||
| Pyridinones | K1 (IC50 = 81.28 μM) | Stem | Tikrom, near Kumasi, Ghana | Gbedema et al. [ | ||
| Others | K1 (IC50 = 32.12 μM) | Aerial part | Obala, along River Sanaga, Cameroon | Kouam et al. [ |
aCompounds identified for the first time in the cited publications
bIdentification number of the source species, derived from the NCBI Taxonomy database
Fig. 1Aporphine alkaloids (1 and 2)
Fig. 2Furoquinoline alkaloids (3 to 7)
Fig. 3Indole alkaloids (8 and 9)
Fig. 4Indole alkaloids (10 to 15)
Fig. 5Indolosesquiterpene alkaloids (16 and 17)
Fig. 6Naphthylisoquinoline alkaloids I (18 and 19)
Fig. 7Naphthylisoquinoline alkaloids II (20 to 25)
Fig. 8Naphthylisoquinoline alkaloids III (26 to 29)
Fig. 9Protoberberine alkaloids (30 to 34)
Fig. 10Other alkaloids (35 and 36)
Fig. 11Flavanones and flavones (37 to 49)
Fig. 12Glycoflavonoids (50 to 54)
Fig. 13Isoflavones (55 to 74)
Fig. 14Retonoids (75 to 77)
Summary of flavonoids
| Compound subclass | Isolated metabolites | Plasmodial strain (activities) | Plant species (Family), Taxon IDb | Part of the plant studied | Place of harvest (locality, country) | Author, references |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flavanones and flavones | D6 (from 11.26 to 56.31 μM) | Leaves | Mount Kenya Forest, Meru, Kenya | Kerubo et al. [ | ||
| W2 (from 15.48 to 87.50 μM) | ||||||
| D6 (from 11.30 to 14.00 μM) | Roots | Manyani, TaitaTaveta County, Kenya | Muiva-Mutisya et al. [ | |||
| W2 (from 13.10 to 20.40 µM) | ||||||
| F32 (from 2.18 to 21.13 μM) | Whole plant | Mount Kala, Cameroon | Azebaze et al. [ | |||
| FcM29 (from 1.75 to 22.59 μM) | ||||||
| W2mef (19.37 μM) | Whole plant | Mount Cameroon, Cameroon | Ngemenya et al. [ | |||
| Dd2 (3.18 μM) | ||||||
| Glycoflavonoids | D6 (97.1 and 42.9 μM, respectively) | Leaves | Gakoe Forest, Kiambu County, Kenya | Irungu et al. [ | ||
| W2 (105.8 μM) | ||||||
| Stem barks and leaves | Kinshasa, DR Congo | Tshitenge et al. [ | ||||
| F32 (15.98 and 40.36 μM, respectively, at 24 h and 72 h) | Whole plant | Mount Kala, Cameroon | Azebaze et al. [ | |||
| FcM29 (11.69 and 33.24 µM , respectively, at 24 h and 72 h) | ||||||
| Isoflavones | W2 (from 14.9 to 53.1 μM) | Stem bark | Taita Hill Forest, Kenya | Derese et al. [ | ||
| D6 (from 13.3 to 48.7 μM) | ||||||
| 3D7 and Dd2 (70 to 90% inhibition at 40 μM) | Root bark | Kisarawe, Tanzania | Marco et al. [ | |||
| Retonoids | D6 (18.71 µM for compound | Roots | Manyani, Taita Taveta County, Kenya | Muiva-Mutisya et al. [ | ||
| W2 (28.64 µM for compound |
aCompounds identified for the first time in the cited publications
bIdentification number of the source species, derived from the NCBI Taxonomy database
Summary of phenolics and quinones
| Compound subclass | Isolated metabolites | Plasmodial strain (activities) | Plant species (Family), Taxon IDb | Part of the plant studied | Place of harvest (locality, country) | Author, references |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ellagic acid derivative (phenolics) | D6 (8.01 µM) | Stem bark | Machakos County, Kenya | Machumi et al. [ | ||
| W2 (8.01 µM) | ||||||
| Phenolic glycosides (phenolics) | Stem barks and leaves | Kinshasa, DR Congo | Tshitenge et al. [ | |||
| Anthraquinones (quinones) | D6 (from 0.47 to 23.25 μM) | Rhizomes | Addis Ababa, Ethiopia | Induli et al. [ | ||
| W2 (from 0.35 to 18.42 μM ) | ||||||
| D6 (7.73 μM) | Roots | Gedo, Ethiopia | Abdissa et al. [ | |||
| W2 (2.22 μM) | ||||||
| D6 (9.40 μM) | Roots | Gedo, Ethiopia | Abdissa et al. [ | |||
| W2 (14.58 μM) | ||||||
| 3D7 (0.7 μM) | Leaves | Addis Ababa, Ethiopia | Feilcke et al. [ | |||
| K1 (0.17 and 0.26 μm, respectively) | Roots | Chiromo Campus Garden, Kenya | Bringmann et al. [ | |||
| D6 (19.66 to 82.80 μM) | Roots | Saka Chokorsa, Ethiopia | Abdissa et al. [ | |||
| W2 (64.46 to 141.95 μM) | ||||||
| 3D7 (1.9 μM) | Leaves | Addis Ababa, Ethiopia | Feilcke et al. [ | |||
| NF54 (weak activity) | Stem bark | Kribi, Cameroon | Lenta et al. [ | |||
| Anthrones (quinones) | Suppression of parasitaemia from 36.8 to 66.8% at doses of 100 to 400 mg/kg /day | Leaf latex | Edagahamus, Ethiopia | Geremedhin et al. [ | ||
| Naphthohydroquinones (quinones) | D6 (from 19.59 to 36.03 μM) | Roots | Mombasa, Kenya | Endale et al. [ | ||
| W2 (60.08 to 144.43 μM) | ||||||
| Other quinones | W2mef (52.25 μM) | Whole plant | Mount Cameroon, Cameroon | Ngemenya et al. [ | ||
| D6 (19.28 μM) | Stem bark | Kibale National Park, Uganda | Namukobe et al. [ | |||
| W2 (14.17 μM) |
aCompounds identified for the first time in the cited publications
bIdentification number of the source species, derived from the NCBI Taxonomy database
Fig. 15Ellagic acid derivative (78)
Fig. 16Phenolic glycosides (79 and 80)
Fig. 17Anthraquinones (81 to 92)
Fig. 18Anthraquinones (93 to 97)
Fig. 19Anthrones (98 to101)
Fig. 20Naphthohydroquinones (102 to 106)
Fig. 21Other quinones (107 and 108)
Summary of steroids
| Compound subclass | Isolated metabolites | Plasmodial strain (activities) | Plant species (Family), Taxon IDb | Part of the plant studied | Place of harvest (City, Country) | Author, references |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ergostane phytosterols | 3D7 (IC50 values range from 11.2 to 22.0 µM) | Stem bark | Mount Kala, Cameroon | Douanla et al. [ | ||
| W2 ( IC50 values range from 11.2 to 22.0 µM) | ||||||
| W2mef (IC50 value = 53.45 µM) | Whole plant | Mount Cameroon, Cameroon | Ngemenya et al. [ | |||
| W2 (IC50 value = 153.79 µM) | Stem | Tikrom, near Kumasi, Ghana | Gbedema et al. [ | |||
| W2 (IC50 value = 172.9 µM) | Stem bark | Nairobi, Kenya | Irungu et al. [ | |||
| D6 (IC50 value = 68.3 µM) | ||||||
| Phytosterol glucosides | D6 and W2 (from weak to moderate activities) | Stem bark | Nairobi, Kenya | Irungu et al. [ |
aCompounds identified for the first time in the cited publications
bIdentification number of the source species, derived from the NCBI Taxonomy database
Fig. 22Ergostane phytosterols (109 to 111)
Fig. 23Ergostane phytosterols (112 and 113)
Fig. 24Phytosterol glucosides (114 to 116)
Summary of diterpenoids and sesquiterpenoids
| Compound subclass | Isolated metabolites | Plasmodial strain (activities) | Plant species (Family), Taxon IDb | Part of the plant studied | Place of harvest (Locality, Country) | Author, references |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clerodane diterpenes | K1 (IC50 values range from 9.59 to 18.41 µM) | Stem | Tikrom, near Kumasi, Ghana | Gbedema et al. [ | ||
| Daphnane diterpenoids | FcB1 (IC50 value = 19.02 µM) | Stem bark | Kibale National Park, Uganda | Namukobe et al. [ | ||
| D6 (IC50 values = 65.14 and 6.96 µM, respectively) | Stem bark | Kibale National Park, Uganda | Namukobe et al. [ | |||
| W2 (IC50 values = 57.82 and 4.10 µM, respectively) | ||||||
| Iridoid diterpenoid | K1 (IC50 value = 171.68 µM) | Aerial part | Obala, along River Sanaga, Cameroon | Kouam et al. [ | ||
| Labdane diterpenoids | Suppression of | Leaves | Chancho, Central Ethiopia | Endale et al. [ | ||
| Norcassane furanoditerpene | 3D7 (IC50 value = 2.20 μM) | Roots | Dar es Salaam Region, Tanzania | Nondo et al. [ | ||
| Dd2 (IC50 value = 4.16 μM) | ||||||
| Sesquiterpenoids | W2 (IC50 values range from 1.71 to 2.63 µM) | Seeds | Mount Kala, Cameroon | Mba’ning et al. [ | ||
| NF54 (IC50 value = 15.69 μM) | Rhizomes | Oku, Cameroon | Nyongbela et al. [ | |||
| K1 (IC50 value = 13.54 μM) |
aCompounds identified for the first time in the cited publications
bIdentification number of the source species, derived from the NCBI Taxonomy database
Summary of triterpenoids
| Compound subclass | Isolated metabolites | Plasmodial strain (activities) | Plant species (Family), Taxon IDb | Part of the plant studied | Place of harvest (Locality, Country) | Author, references |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acyclic triterpenes | D6 (IC50 values = 27.1 and 56.1 µM, respectively) | Leaves | Gakoe forest, Kiambu County, Kenya | Irungu et al. [ | ||
| W2 (IC50 values = 66.9 and 64.3 µM, respectively) | ||||||
| Apotirucallane triterpenoids | NF54 (IC50 values range from 0.67 to 19.3 µM) | Bark | Nkomokui, Cameroon | Happi et al. [ | ||
| Cycloartane triterpenes | FcB1 (all IC50 values < 11 μM, the lowest value being 1.48 μM) | Stem bark | Kibale National Park, Uganda | Namukobe et al. [ | ||
| aAll new | ||||||
| Lanostane triterpene | D6 (IC50 value = 257.8 nM) | Whole organism | Egypt | Wahba et al. [ | ||
| W2 (IC50 value = 2000.0 nM) | ||||||
| Limonoids | D6 (IC50 value = 84.7 µM) | Leaves | Gakoe forest, Kiambu County, Kenya | Irungu et al. [ | ||
| W2 (IC50 value = 150.2 µM) | ||||||
| D6 (IC50 values range from 2.4 to 36.6 µM) | Root bark | Nairobi, Kenya | Irungu et al. [ | |||
| W2 (from 1.1 to 40.5 µM) | ||||||
| Oleanane triterpenes | D6 (IC50 values range from 38.8 to 205.0 µM) | Leaves | Gakoe forest, Kiambu County, Kenya | Irungu et al. [ | ||
| W2 (IC50 values range from 76.7 to 179.4 µM) | ||||||
| 3D7 (IC50 values = 59.4 and 32.4 µM, respectively) | Twigs | Adjarra-Ouémé, Benin Republic | Bero et al. [ | |||
| D10 (IC50 values range from 3.81 to 15.54 μM) | Leaves | Durban, KwaZulu-Natal Province, South Africa | Simelane et al. [ | |||
| Tirucallane-type triterpenoids | NF54 (IC50 values range from 2.4 to 6.1 µM) | Bark | Nkomokui, Cameroon | Happi et al. [ | ||
| Protolimonoids | D6 (IC50 values range from 36.8 to 48.2 µM) | Stem bark | Nairobi, Kenya | Irungu et al. [ | ||
| W2 (IC50 values range from 37.2 to 77.0 µM) | ||||||
| Other triterpenoids (hopane-type and cycloartane-type) | NF54 (IC50 value = 112.94 μM) | Stem bark | Kribi, Cameroon | Lenta et al. [ | ||
| NF54 (IC50 value = 97.73 μM) | Stem bark | Pietermaritzburg, South Africa | Chukwujekwu et al. [ | |||
| FcB1( IC50 value = 2.15 µM) | Stem bark | Kibale National Park, Uganda | Namukobe et al. [ |
aCompounds identified for the first time in the cited publications
bIdentification number of the source species, derived from the NCBI Taxonomy database
Fig. 25Clerodane and daphnane diterpenoids (117 to 122)
Fig. 26Iridoid, labdanes and norcassane diterpenoids (123 to 125)
Fig. 27Sesquiterpenes (126 to 131)
Fig. 28Acyclic triterpenes (132 and 133)
Fig. 29Apotirucallane triterpenoids (134 to 142)
Fig. 30Cycloartane triterpenes (143 to 150)
Fig. 31Lanostane triterpene (151)
Fig. 32Limonoids (152 to 157)
Fig. 33Oleanane triterpenes (158 to 164)
Fig. 34Tirucallane-type triterpenoids (165 to 167)
Fig. 35Protolimonoids (168 to 170)
Fig. 36Other triterpenes (171 and 173)
Summary of other compound classes
| Compound subclass | Isolated metabolites | Plasmodial strain (activities) | Plant species (Family), Taxon IDa | Part of the plant studied | Place of harvest (Locality, Country) | Author, references |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amide | 3D7 (IC50 value = 39.04 µM) | Leaves | Langevin, Reunion Island | Ledoux et al. [ | ||
| Coumarins | 3D7 (viability percentage = 101.15) | Leaves, trunk, and roots | Ntouessong and Nkoemvone, Cameroon | Fouokeng et al. [ | ||
| NF54 (IC50 values vary from 2.17 to 60.09 µM) | Stem bark | Kribi, Cameroon | Lenta et al. [ | |||
| Ester | NF54 (IC50 value = 42.59 µM) | Stem bark | Pietermaritzburg, South Africa | Chukwujekwu et al. [ | ||
| Lactones | NF54 (IC50 value = 109.99 µM) | Roots | Mutale Municipality, Limpopo Province, South Africa | Bapela [ | ||
| D10 (IC50 value = 24.70 µM) | Leaves | Thathe Vondo village, Limpopo Province, South Africa | Ludere et al. [ | |||
| Naphthalene derivatives | D6 (IC50 value = 10.52 µM for compound | Rhizomes | Addis Ababa, Ethiopia | Induli et al. [ | ||
| W2 (IC50 value = 6.32 µM for compound | ||||||
| 3D7 (IC50 value = 67.32 µM for compound | ||||||
| D6 (IC50 value = 10.48 µM) | Roots | Gedo, Ethiopia | Abdissa n [ | |||
| W2 (IC50 value = 6.28 µM) | ||||||
| Spirobisnaphthalene | NF54 (IC50 value = 73.28 µM) | Bark | Nkomokui, Cameroon | Happi et al. [ | ||
| Xanthones | F32/24h (IC50 values range from 1.16 to 70.33 µM) | Whole plant | Mount Kala, Cameroon | Azebaze et al. [ | ||
| F32/72h (from 0.91 to 50.23 µM) | ||||||
| FCM29/24h (from 0.83 to 17.93 µM) | ||||||
| FCM29/24h (from 0.68 to 67.22 µM) |
aIdentification number of the source species, derived from the NCBI Taxonomy database
Fig. 37Other classes (174 to 187)
Fig. 38Pie chart showing the distribution of the 187 NPs by compound classes
Fig. 39Bar chart showing the distribution of the number of plant species of origin by their families
Fig. 40An attempted chemotaxomic distribution of compound by their classes sorted by the families of the plant species from which they were identified