| Literature DB >> 34158818 |
Chandan Sarkar1, Milon Mondal1, Bilkis Khanom1, Md Monir Hossain2, Md Solayman Hossain1, Antoni Sureda3, Muhammad Torequl Islam1, Miquel Martorell4,5, Manoj Kumar6, Javad Sharifi-Rad7,8, Ahmed Al-Harrasi9, Ahmed Al-Rawahi9.
Abstract
This study aimed to summarize the available data on the ethnomedicinal and phytopharmacological activities of Heliotropium indicum L. based on database reports. For this purpose, an up-to-date literature search was carried out in the Google Scholar, Scopus, Springer Link, Web of Science, ScienceDirect, ResearchGate, PubMed, Chem Spider, Elsevier, BioMed Central, and patent offices (e.g., USPTO, CIPO, NPI, Google patents, and Espacenet) for the published materials. The findings suggest that the plant contains many important phytochemicals, including pyrrolizidine alkaloids, indicine, echinitine, supinine, heleurine, heliotrine, lasiocarpine, acetyl indicine, indicinine, indicine N-oxide, cynoglossine, europine N-oxide, heleurine N-oxide, heliotridine N-oxide, heliotrine N-oxide, heliotrine, volatile oils, triterpenes, amines, and sterols. Scientific reports revealed that the herb showed antioxidant, analgesic, antimicrobial, anticancer, antituberculosis, antiplasmodial, anticataract, antifertility, wound healing, antiinflammatory, antinociceptive, antihyperglycemic, anthelmintic, diuretic, antitussive, antiglaucoma, antiallergic, and larvicidal activity. In conclusion, in vitro studies with animal models seem to show the potential beneficial effects of H. indicum against a wide variety of disorders and as a source of phytotherapeutic compounds. However, clinical studies are necessary to confirm the effects observed in animal models, determine the toxicity of the therapeutic dose and isolate the truly bioactive components.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34158818 PMCID: PMC8187075 DOI: 10.1155/2021/9965481
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Figure 1Different parts of Heliotropium indicum Linn:(a) whole plant, (b) leaves, (c) flowers, (d) seeds, and (e) roots.
Botanical morphology of Heliotropium indicum L.
| Habitat | The disturbed areas are garden or lawns, roadsides, anthropogenic habitats, and waste places. It is mostly found at a 1,000 m altitude. | |
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| Foliage | Leaves | 4–10 cm long and 2–5 cm wide, opposite, or sub-opposite, alternate or sub-alternate, ovate to obovate, and acute, with a wavy or undulate, serrulate, or cordate leaf margin, nerves on either side or veins. The leaf surface is covered with short hairs, which may be quite stiff. |
| Petiole | 1–7 cm long with a sub-truncate base or ovate | |
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| Flowers | 4–5 mm wide, regular, sessile, axillary, and slightly purple or white or whitish violet with a small yellow center and having a narrow tube with lobes formed a plate shape | |
| Inflorescence | String or twisted of beads with a prominent curl at the apex. Flowers develop apically within the cymose inflorescence. | |
| Sepals | 5 in number, 3 mm long, diffused with hairs outside, deep green in color, linear to lanceolate, and uneven or unequal | |
| Calyx lobes ciliate | 3 mm long | |
| Stamens | 5 in number and borne in a corolla tube, terminal, and corolla tube 4–6 mm long | |
| Petals | Rounded | |
| Ovary | 4 lobed | |
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| Fruits | Fruits, also known as nutlets, are dry, indehiscent 2–4 lobed, 3–6 mm long, with or without united nutlets, ovate, and ribbed separated into two nutlets. Each nutlet is two-celled and beaked. | |
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| Stem and roots | Wide distributed, branched or unbranched, and hirsute with hairs in the stem. The root system is a long taproot and highly branched. | |
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| Genetics | 2 | |
Traditional uses of H. indicum L.
| Country | Local names | Traditional use as or to treat | Part(s) used | Mode of administration | Reference(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bangladesh | Hatisur | Antidote to poisoning | Leaves and stem | Decoction of leaves and stems is administered orally. | [ |
| Swelling of knees, joint pain, and severe itching in leg | Root | Decoction or maceration of the root is used through vocal order (VO). | [ | ||
| Chicken pox | Leaves | Juice of roots is taken orally. | [ | ||
| Allergy | Leaves | Juice of the leaf is taken orally. | |||
| Blood purification and infections | Root | Juice of roots is used both orally and topically. | [ | ||
| Brazil | Aguará-ciunhá-ac¸ú and jacuá-acanga | Skin ulcers and burns | Leaves | Unknown | [ |
| Benin | Koklosoudèn | Dystocia | Leaves | Trituration with water and drops in eyes | [ |
| Femal | Leaves | Leaf extract is filtered then applied through VO. | |||
| Leucorrhoea | Whole plant | The diluted juice is administered through VO. | |||
| Splenomegalia | Leaves | Unknown | |||
| Psychosis | Leaves and root | Unknown | |||
| Koclossoudinkpatcha (Fon) | Internal infection and hypertension | Stem and leaves | Decoction of stems with leaves is applied through VO. | [ | |
| Congo | Not registered | Stomach, fever, and eye lotion | Leaves | Decoction of fresh leaves with water that is taken 1 glass/day for 1 week. | [ |
| Colombia | Rabo de alacrán and verbena | Internal parasites | Leaves | Decoction of fresh leaves | [ |
| Guinea | Nasinko and hogghonhwan | Diarrhea and febrifuge | Whole plant | Decoction of the whole plant | [ |
| Antiseptic | Leaves | The decoction of leaves is allowed to administer through vocal order. | [ | ||
| Ghana | Kɔmfemtikorɔ | Paludism and eye infections | Leaves | Decoction of leaves is used for 7 days. | [ |
| Conakry | Not registered | Fever | Whole plant | Decoction of the whole plant | [ |
| Gabon | (mo-)nyaka (w-)a mbumba (Eviya language) | Gingivitis | Leaves | Ground leaves of | [ |
| India | Nakkipoo | Snakebite and scorpion sting | Leaves | The leaf juice is used by mixing with hot water. | [ |
| Indian heliotrope and hatisundha | Wounds and skin infections | Whole plant | Paste of the whole plant is applied topically. | [ | |
| Ophthalmia | Root | Juice of the root is taken orally. | [ | ||
| Ivory Coast | Klaouri (Gouro), kotokorokombo (Baoule), nansifo, nosiko (Malinke), tapentiti, and taperodia (Shien) | Colds and sinusitis | Leaves | Powder of dry leaves | [ |
| Indonesia | Bandotanlombok, djingirajam, gadjahan, tlale, and tusokkonde | Herpes and rheumatism | Leaves | Decoction of leaf is used in thrush and poultices. | [ |
| Jamaica | Turnsoles | Menorrhagia | Flower | Infusion of the flower is taken orally. | [ |
| Fever, ulcers, venereal diseases, and sore throat | Whole plant | Decoction of the whole plant is taken orally. | |||
| Induced abortion | Whole plant | Decoction of the whole plant is applied to the vaginal cavity. | |||
| Rectal sores | Whole plant | Decoction of the whole plant is administered rectally. | |||
| Cleansing and dressing of wounds and ulcers | Whole plant | Paste of fresh plant | |||
| Mauritius | Herbepapillon (Creole) and taylkoudougou (Tamoul) | Renal colic | Leaves | Infusion of 4 or 5 green leaves | [ |
| Ophthalmia, diuretic, anthrax (poultice), and ulcers | Leaves | Diluted leaf of 1 or 2 cups | |||
| Mali | Nonsikou (Bambara) | Nausea and vomiting | Whole plant | Boiled decoction of plant bundle is taken orally. | [ |
| Baby thinness | Leaves | Leaves decoction through VO and bath 4x/day for 10 days | [ | ||
| Ocular infection | Leaves | Leaves decoction is used to wash eyes. | |||
| Amenorrhea | Root | Decoction of roots is applied through VO and bath for 3 days. | |||
| High blood pressure | Leaves | Leaves decoction (VO) | |||
| Mexico | Not registered | Asthma | Root | Decoction of roots or any plant part | [ |
| Nigeria | Agogo-igun, ogbe, and akuko | Paludism, and sap is applied to gumboils. | Leaves | The decoction with water and allowed to administer through vocal order | [ |
| Hepatitis and fever | Leaves | The decoction with water and allowed to administer through vocal order | |||
| Gonorrhea | Leaves | The leaf juice mixed with castor oil is locally applied. | [ | ||
| Otukeyin, ekaesinono, and edisimon (Ibibio) | Boils and sore throat | Leaves | Decoction of crushed leaves is applied through VO. | [ | |
| Nicaragua | Not registered | Skin infections | Leaves | Leaf paste is applied topically for skin infections. | [ |
| Whooping cough | Leaves and root | Decoction of a combination of leaf and root is taken orally. | |||
| Philippines | Buntot-leon, pengnga-pengnga, and puntaelepante | Diuretic and kidney stone | Whole plant | Decoction of the whole plant is taken orally. | [ |
| Rodrigues Island | Herbepapillon | Calculus | Whole plant | Decoction of the plant is applied through VO. | [ |
| Herbepapillon (Rodrigues Creole) and Indian heliotrope (English) | Bloating and loss of appetite | Leaves | Decoction of the leaves (VO). 1 cup when needed. | [ | |
| Siby | Nonsikou | Vomiting | Leaves | Unknown | [ |
| Seychelles | Not registered | Chirurgical pain | Leaves | The decoction with water and allowed to administer through vocal order | [ |
| Senegal | Manding-bambarańâgiku | Child, eczema, impetigo, and dermatitis | Leaves | The leaf powder is prepared by drying in the shadow and in the open-air that is applied in local. | [ |
| Diuretic and kidney stone | Whole plant | Decoction of the whole plant is taken orally. | [ | ||
| Sao Tome | Folhagalo | Ulcers | Leaves | The crushed leaves with palm oil are applied on the affected area. | [ |
| Sierra Leone | Not registered | Washing the newborn babies | Leaves | Decoction of leaves | [ |
| South America | Not registered | Insect bites and scorpion stings | Leaves and root | Paste of leaf and root together is applied externally. | [ |
| Togo | Koklotadoe and agamassiké (Ewé) | Dermatosis | Leaves | Local application of leaves juice | [ |
| Liver diseases | Whole plant | Decoction of the whole plant | [ | ||
| Tanzania | Humbangara (Ngoni) | Yaws | Root | Decoction or maceration of the root through VO | [ |
| Taiwan | Gou-wei-chung-tsan | Hepatitis | Leaves and root | Paste of leaf and root together is applied externally. | [ |
| Thailand | Yah nguang-chang | Produce permanent sterilization in females | Inflorescence | One gram of the dried and powdered inflorescence mixed with milk or water is used for 3 days beginning with the fourth day of menses to achieve the desired result. | [ |
| West Indies | Head lice | Whole plant | Paste of fresh whole plant | [ |
Chemical compounds isolated from H. indicum L.
| Phytochemicals | Part(s) | Reference(s) |
|---|---|---|
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| Cynoglossine | Seed | [ |
| Echinatine | Aerial | [ |
| Heleurine | Aerial | [ |
| Heliotrine | Aerial | [ |
| Heliotridine | Aerial | [ |
| Helindicine | Root | [ |
| Europine | Seed | [ |
| Heleurine | Seed | [ |
| Heliotridine | Seed | [ |
| Heliotrine | Seed | [ |
| Indicine | Aerial | [ |
| Indicine | Aerial | [ |
| Lasiocarpine | Aerial | [ |
| Lycopsamine | Root | [ |
| Trachelanthamidine | Leaves | [ |
| Retronecine | Leaves and aerial | [ |
| Supinine | Aerial | [ |
| Triterpenes | ||
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| Whole plant | [ |
| Lupeol | Aerial and whole plant | [ |
| Rapanone | Whole plant | [ |
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| Whole plant | [ |
| Estradiol | Root | [ |
| Chalinasterol | Whole plant | [ |
| Campesterol | Whole plant | [ |
| Hexacosane-1-ol | Whole plant | [ |
| Stigmasterol | Whole plant | [ |
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| Putrescine | Leaves | [ |
| Spermidine | Leaves | [ |
| Spermine | Leaves | [ |
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| 1-Dodecanol | Whole plant | [ |
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| Whole plant | [ |
| Phytol | Whole plant | [ |
Figure 2Some important isolated compounds from H. indicum L.
Pharmacological activities of different parts of H. indicum L.
| Activity | Extract | Method | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antioxidant activity | Methanolic extract of leaf, stem, and root | DPPH free radical scavenging assay | Leaf extract yields greater free radical scavenging activity than the stem and roots. | [ |
| Aqueous leaf extract | Show high free radical scavenging activity compared with | [ | ||
| Ethanol and water extracts of the whole plant | Ethanolic extract showed high antioxidant activity. | [ | ||
| Analgesic activity | Aqueous and ethanol extracts of the whole plant |
| Both extracts have analgesic activity. | [ |
| Antinociceptive activity | Methanolic extract of the roots | Acetic-acid-induced writhing in mice | Extract produced writhing inhibition in the test animals. | [ |
| Chloroform extract of leaves | Hot-plate model in male Swiss albino mice | Extract showed writhing inhibition in mice. | [ | |
| Antiinflammatory activity | Methanol extracts of leaf, stem, and root | Egg-albumin- and carrageenin-induced acute paw edema models and cotton pellet granuloma sub-acute inflammation model | Extract of roots produced a significant antiinflammatory effect in acetic-acid-induced writhing in mice. | [ |
| Chloroform extract of leaves | Carrageenan-induced raw paw edema | The extract showed maximum inhibition on carrageenan-induced rat paw edema. | [ | |
| Aqueous whole plant extract | Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) induced uveitis rabbits | The extract reduced both the clinical scores of inflammation and inflammatory cells infiltration. | [ | |
| Antimicrobial activity | Alcoholic extract of the whole plant | Agar cup plate diffusion method | The alcoholic extract was found to possess dose-dependent antimicrobial activity against bacteria, fungi, and yeasts, | [ |
| Petroleum ether, chloroform, aqueous, and methanolic extracts of leaves | All extracts show effective antimicrobial activity against both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria | [ | ||
| Aqueous, ethanol, and chloroform extracts of the whole plant | Had significant zones of inhibition against bacteria and fungi. | [ | ||
| Methanol whole plant extracts | Exhibited both antibacterial and antifungal activity. | [ | ||
| Methanol leaves extract | Had an antibacterial activity. | [ | ||
| Antituberculosis activity | Volatile oil of | Alamar blue assay system with an MIC | Had profound antituberculosis activity against | [ |
| Antihyperglycemic activity | Whole plant methanol extracts | Tested on the fasting blood glucose levels of streptozotocin-induced (STZ-induced) diabetic rats | Showed a conspicuous reduction in blood glucose levels and normalization of blood glucose levels. | [ |
| Anticataract activity | Ethanolic leaf extract | Galactose-induced cataract in rats | Significantly increased the lens glutathione. | [ |
| Aqueous extract of the whole plant | Selenite-induced cataracts in Sprague–Dawley rats | Expressively inhibited the development of selenite-induced cataracts. | [ | |
| Antiplasmodial properties | Dichloromethane, methanol, and total aqueous extracts of the whole plant | Tested on chloroquine-sensitive (3D7) and resistant (W2) strains of | Revealed no direct antiplasmodial activity. | [ |
| Antifertility activity | Petroleum ether extract of the whole plant |
| Exhibited profound activity. | [ |
| Extract of the n-hexane and benzene fractions of whole plant | Antiimplantation and abortifacient models in rats | Had substantial antifertility activity. | [ | |
| Anthelmintic activity | Methanolic extract of leaves |
| The extract showed significant anthelmintic efficacy. | [ |
| Antitumor activity | Methanolic extract of both stem and leaf | MTT assay on HeLa cell lines | Both extracts exhibited antiproliferative activity where the stem extract showed interesting results. | [ |
| Ethanolic extract of the whole plant | MTT assay on SKBR3 human breast adenocarcinoma cell line | Showed momentous antiproliferative activity. | [ | |
| Antitussive property | Ethanolic extract of leaves | The citric acid saturated chamber in animals | Extract syrup recorded the lowest number of coughs. | [ |
| Antiglaucoma activity | Aqueous whole plant extract | Glaucoma of rabbits | Significantly reduced intraocular pressure in acute and chronic glaucoma. | [ |
| Wound-healing activity | Dried parts of ethanolic extracts | Excision and restored incision wound model | Showed wound-healing capacity. | [ |
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| The scratch assay | The isolated compound contains profound wound-healing activity. | [ | |
| The petroleum ether, chloroform, methanol, and aqueous extracts of leaves. | Excision (normal and infected), incision, and dead space wound models in rats | Methanol and aqueous extracts attributed intense wound-healing activity. | [ | |
| Histo-gastroprotective activity | Aqueous extract of the dried leaves | Indomethacin-induced gastric ulcerated mucosa in rats | Had effective histo-gastroprotective activity. | [ |
| Diuretic activity | Methanolic extract of the dried roots | Biuret, a urea derivative assayed by the electrolyte loss ratio (Na+/K+ excretion ratio) in mice | The extract revealed a marked diuretic effect. | [ |
| Relaxant/receptor property | Ethanol extract of the roots | Guinea pig ileum and rabbit duodenum | Possess weak smooth muscle relaxant activity. | [ |
| Dark-brown solid extract of aerial parts | Guinea pig ileum, rabbit jejunum, rat uterus, and rat anococcygeus preparations | Showed profound receptor property | [ | |
| Clot lysis and membrane-stabilizing activities | Ethanolic, petroleum ether, carbon tetrachloride, and chloroform extracts of leaves | Membrane-stabilizing and thrombolytic activities | Had potential clot lysis and membrane-stabilizing activities. | [ |
| Methanol extract of the whole plant |
| Protected the hemolysis of RBCs induced by hypotonic solution and heat stress. | [ | |
| Antiallergic activity | Aqueous whole plant extract | Ovalbumin-induced allergic conjunctivitis on Dunkin–Hartley guinea pigs | Exhibited antiallergic effect possibly by immunomodulation or immunosuppression. | [ |
| Larvicidal activity | Ethanolic leaf extract | Larvicidal bioassay on mosquito larvae of | The extract showed effective mosquito larvicidal activity. | [ |
| Pesticidal activity | Ethanol extract of aerial parts | Brine shrimp lethality bioassay | Possess potent activity against the brine shrimp nauplii. | [ |