| Literature DB >> 33424261 |
Rasmita Jena1, Diptirani Rath1, Sudhanshu Sekhar Rout2, Durga Madhab Kar1.
Abstract
The genus Millettia belongs to Fabaceae includes 200 species which are distributed in tropical and subtropical regions of the world. Plants belong to this genus are used as folkloric medicine, for the treatment of different ailments like in wound healing, boil, sores, skin diseases, snake bite, muscle aches, pains, rheumatic arthritis, and gynaecological diseases. The aim of the review is to provide updated, comprehensive and categorized information on the aspects of ethnobotanical, phytochemical, pharmacological uses and toxicity of genus Millettia in order to identify their therapeutic potential and generate space for future research opportunities. The present study comprises of isolated flavonoids, phenolic compounds, phytosterols, saponins, alkaloids, polysaccharides, terpenoids and resins and pharmacological activities of various Millettia species. The relevant data were searched by using the keyword "Millettia" in different scientific databases like, "Google Scholar"; "NISCAIR repository"; "Pub Med"; "Science Direct"; "Scopus" and the taxonomy is validated by "The Plant List". This review discusses the existing information of the traditional evaluation as well as phytochemical and pharmacological evaluation of the extract and active constituents of the genus "Millettia". This review confirms that several Millettia species have emerged as a high-quality medicine in a traditional system for arthritis, wound healing, inflammation, skin diseases. Numerous conventional uses of Millettia species have been validated by modern pharmacology research. Intensive investigations of the genus Millettia relating to phytochemistry and pharmacology, especially their mechanism of action, safety, and efficacy could be the future research interests by the researcher in the area of phytomedicine.Entities:
Keywords: Biological activities; CH2Cl2, dichloromethane; CNS, central nervous system; COX, cycloxygenase; COX-2, cyclooxygenase-2; Chemical constituents; DPPH, 2,2-diphenyl-picyrlhydrazyl; EtOAc, ethyl acetate; Ethnomedicine; Fabaceae; HCT116, colon cancer; HepG2, hepatocellular carcinoma; IL-6, interleukin; KG-1, acute myelogenous leukemia cell line; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; MCF7, breast cancer cell line; MDR, multidrug resistance; MIC, minimum inhibitory concentration; MTT assay, 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide; MeOH, CH3OH, methanol; Millettia; NO, nitric oxide; ORAC assay, oxygen radical absorption capacity; Raji, lymphoma cell line; SRA, scavenger receptor type A and GR, glucagon receptor; TLR4, toll-like receptor4; TNF-α, tumour necrosis factor; iNOS, inducible nitric oxide synthase; n-BuoH, n-butanol
Year: 2020 PMID: 33424261 PMCID: PMC7783215 DOI: 10.1016/j.jsps.2020.10.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Saudi Pharm J ISSN: 1319-0164 Impact factor: 4.330
Traditional uses of plant parts belonging to Millettia species.
| Plant Species | Plant parts | Traditional uses and method of preparation/administration | Geographical distribution | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stem, root, leaves, bark | Infected wound, tonic, skin infection, cough, boils, sores | India | ( | |
| Bark | Hypotension, malaria | Pakistan | ( | |
| Stem, bark | Insecticidal, molluscicidal, pesticidal | France, Cameroon, Nigeria | ( | |
| Seed | Pain, bruises, skin disorders, anthelmintic. The seeds are useful for the treatment of worm infection. | South-East Asia, China, India, Bhutan, Nepal, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Thailand, Taiwan | ( | |
| Leaves, stem | Toothache, insecticide, vermifuge, fishing poison | India | ( | |
| Leaves, stem | Muscle ache, pain, rheumatoid arthritis | China, Vietnam, Laos | ( | |
| Stem bark, seed pod, root | Insecticidal, pesticidal, larvicidal, diarrhoea, hernia, wound healing, menstrual irregularities | Kenya | ( | |
| Vine stem, leaves | Pain, relieving stasis, promoting blood circulation, irregular menstruation | China | ( | |
| Root bark | Cancer | Italy | ( | |
| Stem bark | Commercial timber | France, Africa, Republic of Congo, Cameroon | ( | |
| Seed, flower | Diarrhoea, ulcer, diabetes | Australia, Pacific islands. In Tropical Asia it extends from India, Japan, and Thailand to Malaysia including Himalayan foothills. | ( | |
| Root | Joint pain, rheumatoid arthritis, amenorrhea, hepatitis, tuberculosis, chronic bronchitis | China | ( | |
| Root | Haematonic, inflammation, ulcer | Thailand | ( | |
| Vine stem | Cancer, inflammation | China | ( | |
| Twig | Fish poison, insecticide | Cameroon | ( | |
| Stem | Inflammation, joint pain, skin disease | China | ( | |
| Vine stem | Promotes blood circulation, relieving stasis | China | ( | |
| Whole plant | Memory improvement, anti-ageing | China | ( | |
| Stem, bark root, twig | Vermifuge, purgative, feverish aches, cough, dysmenorrheal, cardiac pain | Cameroon | ( | |
| Stem bark, leaves | Relieve pain, parasitosis, cough, female sterility, headache, rheumatism | Congo | ( |
Isolated phytoconstituents of evaluated extracts from Millettia species.
| Plant Species | Phytoconstituents | Chemical class | Extracts | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Millexatins A, Millexatins B, Millexatins C, Millexatins D, Millexatins E, Millexatins F, Auriculatin, Scandenone, Elongatin, Auriculasin, Isoauriculasin, isoauriculatin, 3′-methylorobol, 7,4′-di- | Isoflavones | Acetone | ( | |
| (−)-maackiain | Pterocarpan | |||
| (−)-sumatrol | Rotenoids | |||
| 7-(4 methoxyphenyl)-9H-furo[2,3-f]chromen-9-one, | Flavonoids | Chloroform fraction of methanol extract | ( | |
| Pervilleanone (Potent hypotensiveagent) | Prenylated isoflavanone | |||
| 4-methoxylonchocarpin, dorspoinsettifolin, isobavachromene, deguelin, tephrosin, barbigerone, 4′,5′-dimethoxy-6,6-dimethylpyrano isoflavones, 4′-hydroxyisolonchocarpin, 12a-hydroxyrotennone | Flavonoids | EtOAc extract | ( | |
| 3-hydroxy4-methoxylonchocarpin | Prenylated chalcone | Petroleum ether fraction of ethanol extract | ||
| 4-methoxylonchocarpin | Flavonoids | Petroleum ether fraction of ethanol extract | ||
| Mildiside-A | Isoflavonoe glycoside | Chloroform and EtOAc fraction of ethanol extract | ( | |
| Formononetin, ononin, isoliquiritigenin, liquiritigenin, naringenin, gallocatechin, catechin, (3 | Phenolic derivatives | |||
| 3- | Pterocarpan | Chloroform: methanol(1:1) | ( | |
| Calopogonium isoflavone B, Maximaisoflavone B, durmillone, isoerythrin A-4′-(3-methylbut-2-enyl) ether, 7-hydroxy-8,3′,4′-trimethoxyisoflavone, 7,2′-dimethoxy-4′,5′-methylenedioxyisoflavone | Isoflavones | |||
| Butein | Chalcone | |||
| 3-phenylcoumarin or pervilleanine | Prenylated isoflavanone | Chloroform | ( | |
| Pervilline, Pervillinine | Pterocarpans | |||
| 3α-hydroxyrotenone | Rotenone | |||
| Pervilleanone, 3′- | Isoflavanones | |||
| 4′-methoxy-7- | n-hexane, chloroform | ( | ||
| 4-hydroxy-5,6,7-trimethoxy-3-(3′,4′-methylenedioxy)phenylcoumarin | 3-phenylcoumarin | |||
| 6-methoxy-[2″,3″:7,8]-furanoflavanone, 2,5-dimethoxy-4-hydroxy-[2″,3″:7,8]-furanoflavan | Flavonoid | n-hexane, chloroform, methanol | ( | |
| 3,4-methylenedioxy-2′,4′-dimethoxychalcone | Chalcone | |||
| 3′, 6 '-diketo-7-hydroxy-8,2′,4′-trimethoxyisoflavan or laurentiquinone | Isoflavan-quinone | n-hexane, chloroform, EtOAc, methanol | ( | |
| 3,7,4 '-trihydroxy-3′,5′-dimethoxyflavone or laurentinol | Flavonol | |||
| Calycosin, Glyricidin | Isoflavones | |||
| 4- prenyloxyderrone, durmilone, 8- | Isoflavone | CH2Cl2:MeOH (1:1) | ( | |
| Tephrosin | Rotenoid | |||
| Lupeol | Triterpene | |||
| 1-(3-hydroxy-4-methoxyphenyl)-3-(2,4-dihydroxy-5-methoxyphenyl)propan-1-ol (millettinol) physcion, ( | Phenolic compound | n-BuOH, EtOAc fraction of ethanol extract | ( | |
| 4-hydroxy-3-methoxy-8,9-methylenedioxypterocarpan | Pterocarpan | |||
| 5,4′-dihydroxy-7,8-dimethoxyisoflavone | Isoflavone | |||
| Resin, flavonoids, terpenoids, phenols, saponins, alkaloids, alkyd resin | ( | |||
| Palmitic acid, stearic acid, oleic acid, linoleic acid, lignoceric acid, arachidic acid and behenic acid | Fatty acid | Oil extract | ||
| Naringenin, liquiritigenin, garbanzol | Flavonoid | n-BuOH, EtOAc fraction of ethanol extract | ( | |
| Calycosin, 2′-hydrroxybiochanin | Isoflavones | |||
| Secoisolariciresinol, polystachyol | Lignan | |||
| 4,4′-dihydroxy-2′-methoxychalcone, 2,4′-dihydroxy-4-methoxychalcone | Chalcones | |||
| Rhododendrol | Phenolic compound | |||
| Polysaccharide(MSCP2) | Aqueous | ( | ||
| Brandisianones A, Brandisianones B, Brandisianones C, Brandisianones D, Brandisianones E | Flavonoids | Dichloromethane | ( | |
| Conrauinones C, Conrauinones D, 7- hydroxyl-6-methoxy-3′,4′-methylenedioxy isoflavone | O-geranylated isoflavones | Benzene | ( | |
| Elliptol, 12-deoxo-12-α-methoxyelliptone, 6-methoxy-6a,12a-dehydrodeguelin, 6a,12a-dehydrodeguelin, 6-hydroxy-6a,12a-dehydrodeguelin, 6-oxo-6a,12a-dehydrodeguelin, elliptone, 12a-hydroxyelliptone, eriodictyol | Prenylated rotenoids | CH2Cl2:MeOH (1:1) | ( | |
| Micanspterocarpan | Pterocarpan | CH2Cl2:MeOH (1:1) | ( | |
| Griffinones A, Griffinones B, Griffinones C, Griffinones D, Griffinones E | Flavonoids | n-hexane, EtOAc | ( | |
| Griffiliganan A | Biphenylneolignan | |||
| 5-hydroxy-4,7′-dimethoxyisoflavone | Isoflavones | Methanol | ( | |
| Furanonaphthoquinone | Naphthalene | |||
| Pachyloisoflavone A, Pachyloisoflavone B | Prenylated isoflavones | Ethanol | ( | |
| Pachylobin A | Pterocarpan | |||
| 6-methoxycalogonium isoflavones A, durallone, genistein, millesianin C, millesianin D, afromosin, hernancorizin, ichthynone, 5-hydroxy-2′,4′,5′,7-tetramethoxyflavone | Flavonoids | |||
| (2 | Isoflavones | Chloroform, methanol | ( | |
| (6 | Pterocarpan | |||
| (6a | Rotenoids | Dichloromethane | ( | |
| 12a-epimillettosin, 6a,12a-dehydromillettone, barbigerone, 4′- | Flavonoids | |||
| Millaurine, milletonine | Guanidine alkaloids | Methanol | ( | |
| Afzelin | Flavonoid | |||
| β-sitosterol, β-sitosterol glucoside, a mixture of stigmasterol and β-sitosterol, palmitates | Sterols | |||
| Pentadecane, Tetradecane, Octadecane, Undecane, 9-methylheptadecane, Heptadecane, 2,6,10,15-tetramethyl- 2-Bromo dodecane | Alkane hydrocarbon | Petroleum ether | ( | |
| Eicosane, Heneicosane | Acyclic alkane |
Fig. 1Chemical structure of isolated compounds from various Millettia species.
Reported pharmacological activities of plant extracts and compounds of Millettia species.
| Plant species | Plant parts | Activity studies | Tested extracts/active constituent | Observed effect | Mechanism | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stem bark | Antimicrobial | Hexane, EtOAc | Both extracts showed a MIC value of 64 to 512 µg/mL. | Not studied | ( | ||
| Leaves | Antimicrobial | Acetone, ethanol | Both extracts showed significant MIC value i.e. 140 µg/mL and 210 µg/mL against | Not studied | ( | ||
| Seed, bark, leaves | Antimicrobial | EtOAc, petroleum ether, | EtOAc, petroleum ether extract showed maximum zone of inhibition against | Flavones, flavans, chalcone, triterpenes and aromatic carboxylic acids are responsible for the antimicrobial property. | ( | ||
| Leaves | Antioxidant | Ethanol | Upon the oral administration of the extract (300 mg/kg body mass), there was a significant increase in the reduced glutathione, glutathione peroxidase, catalase, superoxide dismutase level and decrease in the level of conjugative dines, hydrooxyperoxide, thiobarbituric acid reactive substances in albino rats by using ammonium chloride-induced model. | Free radical scavenging activity | ( | ||
| Stem bark | Antioxidant | Hexane, EtOAc, millaurine | Both extracts showed IC50 62.74 and 77.23 µg/mL in DPPH assay. | Free radical scavenging activity | ( | ||
| Stem bark | Antiplasmodial | Rotenoid, flavonoids | Dichloromethane against the chloroquine-sensitive (D6) and chloroquine-resistant (W2) strains of | Not studied | ( | ||
| Stem bark | Antiplasmodial | CH2Cl2/CH3OH (1:1) | The extract showed significant activity against chloroquine-resistant Indochina 1 (W2) and chloroquine-sensitive Sierra Leone 1 (D6) strains of | Presence of isoflavones is responsible | ( | ||
| Root bark | Antiplasmodial | CH2Cl2/CH3OH (1:1) | The minimal activity was found for compounds viz. calopogonium isoflavone B, maximaisoflavone B and 7, 2′-dimethoxy-4′, 5′-methylenedioxyisoflavone against the chloroquine-sensitive 3D7 and the chloroquine-resistant Dd2 | Isoflavones like Calopogonium isoflavone B, Maximaisoflavone B are responsible for this activity | ( | ||
| Root | Immunomodulatory | Polysaccharide fraction (MSCP2) | MSCP2 was confirmed to have significant immunomodulatory activity by improving the pinocytic capacity and increasing the levels of NO, TNF-α, and IL-6. | The molecular mechanism of MSCP2 is executed by macrophage activation through TLR4, SRA and GR mediated signalling pathways. | ( | ||
| Whole plant | Cognitive | Polysaccharide | The animal behavioural study showed that polysaccharide significantly reversed D-galactose induced learning and memory impairments with distinctively decreasing of the content and deposition of β-amyloid peptide increase the level of acetylcholine but decreased the cholinesterase activity. | The mechanisms of this action are the reduction of oxidative stress as well as the suppression of inflammatory responses | ( | ||
| Flower | Anti-cholinesterase | Green synthesized nanoparticles (AgNPs) | The IC50 value of AgNPs was 24.03 ± 1.01 mg/mL for acetylcholinesterase and 171.69 ± 0.98 mg/mL for butyrylcholinesterase which is comparatively higher than the activity of flower extract. | Not studied | ( | ||
| Seed | Anti-cholinesterase | n- BuOH, EtOAc | The isolates were evaluated by Ellman’s methods where they result moderate to weak acetylcholinesterase activity with an IC50 value ranging from 17.14 to 131.17 μM. | Flavonoids exhibited Anti-cholinesterase activity. | ( | ||
| Stem, leaves | Anthelmintic | Chloroform | Extract possessed a significant anthelmintic activity ( | Phenolic compounds and flavonoids may have a direct effect on the pre-parasitic stages which hampers the viability of parasite. | ( | ||
| Leaves | Anthelmintic | Acetone, ethanol, aqueous | After treatment of 1 μL of extract, the % of inhibition on | Due to the presence of flavonoids as its major phytoconstituents. | ( | ||
| Seed, root | Anti-ulcer | Methanol | The extract showed optimal effective dose at a dose of 25 mg/kg in pyloric ligation, aspirin and duodenal induced ulcer model. | Not studied | ( | ||
| Whole plant | Anti inflammatory | EtOAc, n-hexane, griffinone B | Isolates were evaluated on LPS-induced NO production in RAW 264.7 cell resulting significant activity and 3 isolates showed more than 50% inhibition having IC50 value 20.4, 2.1 and 35.7 μM. griffinone B exhibits the best activity. | The possible mechanism is the suppression of the expression of iNOS protein and inhibition of NO production. | ( | ||
| Stem | Anti-inflammatory | Ethanol | Isolates were evaluated for nitric oxide (NO) production in lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-stimulated murine RAW264.7 macrophage cells where (3S)-vestitol showed the highest inhibitory effect (IC50 value 16.0 ± 1.5 μM). | The mechanism is based on a decrease in NO production and TNF-α secretion. | ( | ||
| Leaves | Anti-inflammatory | 70% ethanol | An oral dose of 100, 300 and 1000 mg/kg did not show any gastric lesion and ulcerogenic activity in the both acute and chronic model which implied a significant anti-inflammatory activity. | COX-2 inhibition resulting decrease in PGE-2 synthesis | ( | ||
| Leaves | Antidiabetic | Petroleum ether, chloroform, ethanol, aqueous | An oral dose of 500 mg/kg of extracts was evaluated for in alloxan-induced diabetic rat model against standard drug Glibenclamide. It was observed that the aqueous and ethanol extract showed less potential but significant than the standard Glibenclamide and at the same time both of the extracts decrease the blood glucose and increase the body weight. | The possible mechanism may be for the increase insulin secretion which improves the rate of glucose utilization. Different bioactive constituents like flavonoids, phenolics, steroids also play an important role in antidiabetic study | ( | ||
| Wood | Cytotoxicity, anti-cancer | Ethanol | Extracts were evaluated against NCI-H187, BCA-1and KB tumour cell lines resulting physcion and millettinol having potent activity against the NCI-H187 cell lines (IC50 value 4.30 μg/mL) and BCA-1 cell lines (IC50 value 3.44 μg/mL) respectively. | Not studied | ( | ||
| Root | Cytotoxicity | 70% ethanol, petroleum ether | The extract showed moderate activity against MCF-7, HCT-116, A549, HepG-2 cell lines. | Not studied | ( | ||
| Flower | Cytotoxicity, anti-cancer | Green synthesized nanoparticles | Several concentrations i.e. 11.11, 33.33, 100, 300 μg/mL of extract were evaluated using brine shrimp lethality assay resulting lowered LD50 value of 36.41 μg/mL. | This lowered LD50 value suggests the cytotoxicity activity green silver nanoparticles synthesized. This enhanced activity justifies the presence of toxic molecules which is a probable mechanism for anticancer activity. | ( | ||
| Vine stem | Cytotoxicity | EtOAc, n-BuOH, millepurpan, Medicarpin | Millepurpan showed moderate activity against four cancer cell lines, HepG2, HCT116, Raji and KG-1 cell lines (IC50 values 52.03, 68.89, 40.17 and 61.22 μM respectively). Medicarpin exhibited the best cytotoxic activity as compared to other compounds having IC50 value 38.07, 46.85, 36.13 and 30.11 μM, respectively. | Not studied | ( | ||
| Root | Cytotoxicity, antioxidant, anti-cancer, aromatase inhibition activity, | Dichloromethane | MTT assay of the extract showed significant cytotoxicity against HepG2, A549, HuCCA-1, HeLa cell lines. The flavonoid isolates also showed good aromatase inhibition activity. | Bioactive flavonoids like lanceolatin B, isoloncho may be responsible to execute cytotoxicity as well as anti-cancer activity. | ( | ||
| Stem | Cytotoxicity | Ethanol, durmillone | Preliminary screening study resulted in 10 compounds having cytotoxicity against HeLa and MCF-7 cells and further evaluation against HeLa, HepG2, MCF-7, Hct116, MDA-MB-231 and HUVEC (normal cell line) showed specific cytotoxicity having an IC50 range from 5 to 40 μM among of them durmillone showed potent activity by inducing apoptosis. | The isolates may induce apoptosis and autophagy in a concentration-dependent manner. | ( |