| Literature DB >> 34961220 |
Suganya Murugesu1, Jinap Selamat1,2, Vikneswari Perumal3.
Abstract
Ficus is one of the largest genera in the plant kingdom that belongs to the Moraceae family. This review aimed to summarize the medicinal uses, phytochemistry, and pharmacological actions of two major species from this genus, namely Ficus benghalensis and Ficus religiosa. These species can be found abundantly in most Asian countries, including Malaysia. The chemical analysis report has shown that Ficus species contained a wide range of phytoconstituents, including phenols, flavonoids, alkaloids, tannins, saponins, terpenoids, glycosides, sugar, protein, essential and volatile oils, and steroids. Existing studies on the pharmacological functions have revealed that the observed Ficus species possessed a broad range of biological properties, including antioxidants, antidiabetic, anti-inflammatory, anticancer, antitumor and antiproliferative, antimutagenic, antimicrobial, anti-helminthic, hepatoprotective, wound healing, anticoagulant, immunomodulatory activities, antistress, toxicity studies, and mosquitocidal effects. Apart from the plant parts and their extracts, the endophytes residing in these host plants were discussed as well. This study also includes the recent applications of the Ficus species and their plant parts, mainly in the nanotechnology field. Various search engines and databases were used to obtain the scientific findings, including Google Scholar, ScienceDirect, PMC, Research Gate, and Scopus. Overall, the review discusses the therapeutic potentials discovered in recent times and highlights the research gaps for prospective research work.Entities:
Keywords: Ficus benghalensis; Ficus religiosa; bioactivity; medicinal uses; phytoconstituents
Year: 2021 PMID: 34961220 PMCID: PMC8707271 DOI: 10.3390/plants10122749
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Figure 1The sources and number of publications used.
Figure 2Ficus benghalensis tree, leaves, and fruits. Adapted from CalPhotos (2012) © 2021 Zoya Akulova [13].
Figure 3Ficus religiosa tree, leaves, and fruits. Adapted from CalPhotos (2012) © 2021 Zoya Akulova [13].
Phytochemical constituents present in Ficus benghalensis and Ficus religiosa plant parts.
| Plant Parts | Compound Class | Compounds Identified | References |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Leaf | Phenolics | Gallic acid, theaflavin-3,3′-digallate, rutin, quercetin-3-galactoside, leucodelphinidin, gallocatechin, kaempferol, apigenin | [ |
| Terpenoids/Terpenes | Friedelin, lupeol, β-amyrin, 3-friedelanol, betulinic acid, 20-traxasten-3-ol | ||
| Miscellaneous | Rhein, anthraquinone, taraxosterol, β-sitosterol, bengalenoside, leucocyanidin, psoralen, bergapten | ||
| Bark | Phenolics | Tannins, leucocyanidin-3-O-β-D-glucopyrancoside, leucopelargonidin-3-O-β-D-glucopyranoside, leucopelargonidin-3-O-α-L-rhamnopyranoside, 5,7-dimethylether-leucopelargonidin-3-0-alpha-L-rhamnoside | [ |
| Terpenoids/Terpenes | Lupeol, lupeol acetate, α-amyrin acetate, gluanol acetate, lanostadienylglucosyl cetoleate | ||
| Miscellaneous | 20-tetratriaconthene-2-one, pentatriacontan-5-one, β-sitosterol, meso-inositol, alpha-D-glucose, beta glucoside, saponin, leucoanthocyanidin, leucoanthocyanin, meso-inositol, bengalensisteroic acid acetate, heneicosanyl oleate, 6-heptatriacontene-10-one, 5,3-dimethyl ether-leucocyanidin-3-0-alpha-D-galactosyl cellobioside | ||
| Aerial root | Terpenoids/Terpenes | Phytol, globulol, lanosterol, lupeol, amyrin acetate, lupenyl acetate, friedelanol, cyclolaudenol, epifriedelanol | [ |
| Miscellaneous | Quinic acid, myristic acid, beta-progesterone, palmitic acid, methyl ester palmitic acid, heptadecanoic acid, linoleic acid, linoleoyl chloride, eicosadienoic acid, methyl ester stearic acid, alpha-monostearin, phthalic acid, dioctyl ester, triacontanol, cycloartanyl acetate, dihydrobrassicasterol, stigmasterol, sitosterol, ergosterol acetate, furostano, 4,22-stigmastadiene-3-one, 1-heptatriacotanol, protodioscin | ||
| Fruit | Miscellaneous | hexadecanoic acid, 5-decenedioic acid and methyl esters of 14,17-octadecadienoic acid, undecanoic acid, 5,6-dimethyl, dimethyl ester, hexadecanoic acid, 14-methyl, hexadecanoic acid,14-methyl, heptadecanoic acid, 16 methyl, oxiraneoctanoic acid, 3 octyl | [ |
|
| |||
| Leaf | Phenolics | Eugenol, tannic acid | [ |
| Terpenoids/Terpenes | Lupeol, phytol, linalool, α-cadinol, α-eudesmol, β-eudesmol, epi-α-cadinol, γ-eudesmol, epi-γ-eudesmol, α-amyrin | ||
| Miscellaneous | Campestrol, isofucosterol, | ||
| Bark | Phenolics | Tannin, ceryl behenate, lupeol acetate, α-amyrin acetate, leucopelargonidin-3-O-β-D-glucopyranoside, leucopelargonidin-3-O-α-L-rhamnopyranoside | [ |
| Terpenoids/Terpenes | Lanosterol, lupen-3-one | ||
| Miscellaneous | β-sitosterol, stigmasterol, β-sitosterol-d-glucoside, leucoanthocyanidin, leucoanthocyanin, bergapten, bergaptol | ||
| Stem | Phenolics | 2,6-Dimethoxyphenol | [ |
| Miscellaneous | |||
| Root | Phenolics | Ceryl behenate, lupeol acetate, α-amyrin acetate, leucocyanidin-3-0-β-D-glucopyrancoside, leucopelargonidin-3-0-β-D-glucopyranoside | [ |
| Terpenoids/Terpenes | Lupeol | ||
| Miscellaneous | Saponin, β-sitosterol, leucoanthocyanidin, leucoanthocyanin | ||
| Fruit | Terpenoids/Terpenes | β-caryophyllene, α-terpinene, dendrolasine, α-trans bergamotene, (e)-β-ocimene, α-pinene, limonene, dendrolasine, α-ylangene, α- thujene, α-copaene, β-bourbonene, aromadendrene, δ-cadinene, α-humulene, β-pinene, alloaromadendrene, germacrene, γ-cadinene, bicyclogermacrene | [ |
| Miscellaneous | Stigmasterol, lupeol, undecane, tridecane, tetradecane | ||
Figure 4Distinctive compounds present in Ficus benghalensis (1–5) and Ficus religiosa (4, 6, 7).
Figure 5Chemical structure of bioactive compounds reported from Ficus benghalensis (2–5, 8–10, 11–13) and Ficus religiosa (1, 6–10, 11, 14–16).
Microorganisms isolated from Ficus religiosa and Ficus benghalensis.
| Microbial | Compound | Bioactivity/Uses | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| 1-Eicosane | Antimicrobial | [ |
| Naphthaquinone- antibiotic | Antidiabetic | [ | ||
|
|
| Surfactins | Anti-fungal | [ |
Figure 6Pharmacological activities of Ficus benghalensis and Ficus religiosa.
Pharmacological activities of Ficus benghalensis and Ficus religiosa.
| Species | Bioactivity | Plant Parts | Solvent | Mechanism | Dosage/Concentration/* IC50 | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Antioxidants | Seed | Ethanol | DPPH scavenging | IC50 = 446.9 µg/mL | [ |
| Aerial root | Methanol (M) | DPPH scavenging | M-IC50 = 80.1 µg/mL | [ | ||
| Latex | Methanol | DPPH scavenging | IC50 = 28.6 µg/mL | [ | ||
| Leaves | Hydroethanolic crude (HEC) | DPPH scavenging | HEC- IC50 = 32.3 µg/mL | [ | ||
| Antidiabetic | Bark powder | Aqueous | α-glucosidase inhibition | IC50 = 77.0 µg/mL | [ | |
| Leaves | Ethanol | Model: alloxan-induced diabetic albino rats reduced the triglycerides, cholesterol, and glucose | 200 mg/kg (BW) ** | [ | ||
| Bark | Ethanol | Model: STZ-induced diabetic rats significant reduction in blood glucose levels stimulation of insulin secretion from beta cells of Islets of Langerhans | 150 mg/kg (BW) | [ | ||
| Anti-inflammatory | Root | Ethanol | Model: Excision and incision wound accelerated wound healing decreased epithelization period increased wound contraction rate increased the closure of the excision, enhancing the epithelization increased the granuloma tissue-breaking strength | 200 mg/kg (BW) | [ | |
| Bark | Aqueous | Model: Freund’s complete adjuvant-induced arthritis rat normalized body weight, arthritic score, ankle diameter, and paw volume protective effects on the primary and secondary lesions | 200–400 mg/kg (BW) | [ | ||
| Bark | Aqueous (A) | Model: Incision wound significant increase in the wound-breaking strength | 200 mg/kg (BW) | [ | ||
| Bark | Ethanol | Model: Excision wound accelerated wound healing, decreased epithelization period significant reduction in the wound area increased wound contraction rate increased the closure of the excision, enhancing the epithelization increased the granuloma tissue-breaking strength | 10% ointment formulation | [ | ||
| Leaves | 50% Ethanol | Model 1: Pylorus ligation + aspirin-induced gastric ulcer reduction of damage in the mucosa Ulcer indices (mm2/rat) were reduced, and protection percentage (%) increased in a dose-dependent manner | 100 mg/kg (BW) (29.2 mm2/35.8%) | [ | ||
| Model 2: Acetic acid-induced gastric ulcer reduction of damage in the mucosa Ulcer indices (mm2/rat) were reduced, and protection percentage (%) increased in dose-dependent manner | 100 mg/kg (BW) (10.7 mm2/31.6%) | |||||
| Model 3: Ethanol-hydrochloric acid-induced gastric ulcer reduction of damage in the mucosa Ulcer indices (mm2/rat) were reduced, and protection percentage (%) increased in a dose-dependent manner | 100 mg/kg (BW) (14.7 mm2/41.6%) | |||||
| Analgesic | Root | Aqueous | Model: Swiss albino mice | 100 mg/kg (BW) | [ | |
| Antiproliferative | Stem bark | Butanol fraction | Cell: Yeast cells Yeast cell model caused chromosomal and mitotic aberrations (accumulation of prophases, sticky chromosomes at metaphase, spindle disturbance at prophase, and anaphase bridges) | Cell viability = 8% at 4 mg/mL | [ | |
| Anticancer | Aerial roots | Ethyl acetate | Cell lines: | Cell viability: | [ | |
| Leaves (L) | Methanol | Cell lines: | Cell viability at 100 ppm | [ | ||
| Antimutagenic | Stem bark | Aqueous | Bacteria strain: | IC50 = 70.24 mg/mL | [ | |
| Antimicrobial | Root | Ethanol | Bacteria strains/ Inhibition zone: | 25 mg/mL | [ | |
| Aerial root | Methanol | Bacteria strains/ Inhibition zone: | 200, 100, 50, 25, 12.5, | [ | ||
| Aerial root (AR) | Ethanol | Bacteria strains/Inhibition zone (AR/L/F): moderate activity | 50 µL | [ | ||
| Leaves | Aqueous | Viral strains: moderate activity | HIV-1UG070: IC80 = 6 μg/mL; 6 μg/mL | [ | ||
| Antihelminth | Fruit | Aqueous | Earthworm: 100% mortality within 1 h of exposure | 37.5 mg/mL | [ | |
| Latex | - | Earthworm: Caused paralysis and eventually death | 250 μL | [ | ||
| Hepatoprotective | Latex | Methanol | Model: CCl4-induced hepatotoxicity in albino rats decreased SGPT, SGOT, ALP, and bilirubin level increased total protein level | 300 mg/kg (BW) | [ | |
| Anticoagulant | Leaves | Methanol |
Prothrombin time (PT) 17.7 to 26.7 s Activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) 47.7 to 72.3 s | [ | ||
| Immunomodulatory | Leaves | Butanol fraction | Action: Induced phagocytosis in | 1000 mg/mL | [ | |
|
| Antioxidant | Stem bark | Crude methanol, n-hexane, dichloromethane, ethyl acetate fractions | DPPH scavenging | >90% inhibition | [ |
| Bark | Ethanol (E) | DPPH scavenging | E = 70.5% | [ | ||
| Methanol | DPPH scavenging | IC50 = 48 μg/mL | [ | |||
| Leaves | Methanol | H2O2 scavenging | IC50 = 49.85 µg/mL | [ | ||
| Antidiabetic | Bark | Aqueous | Model: STZ-induced diabetic reduced hyperglycemia increased insulin and glycogen uptake in liver and skeletal muscle reduced serum triglyceride and total cholesterol reduced lipid peroxidation | 250 mg/kg (BW) | [ | |
| Methanol | α-glucosidase inhibition | IC50 = 83.72 μg/mL | [ | |||
| Anti-inflammatory | Latex | Methanol | Model: Cisplatin-induced liver injury reduction in the hyaline droplets, tubular dilation, and recovery normalized serum urea and creatinine reduced lipid oxidation normalized renal biomarkers (glutathione (GSH), superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase (CAT), ATPase (Na+/K+, Ca2+, and Mg2+)) | 200 mg/kg (BW) | [ | |
| Bark | Aqueous |
cell culture real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) downregulation of metalloproteinase-1 ( astringent activity wound healing assay, enhanced wound healing through re-epithelization | 0.02, 0.05, 0.1, and 0.5 mg/mL | [ | ||
| Bark | Extract and ash-methanolic | Model: Burned wound Sprague Dawley 100% wound contraction lower wound closure time progressive re-epithelization formation of granulation tissues cellular proliferation | 10% extract Formulation | [ | ||
| Leaves | Methanol | Model: Ethanol-induced gastric lesions reduce ulcer index through the action against the 5-lipoxygenase pathway stimulates the prostaglandin synthesis, protects the gastric mucosa | 250 mg/kg (BW) | [ | ||
| Model: Aspirin-induced gastric ulcer reduce ulcer index through the action against the 5-lipoxygenase pathway and inhibition of leukotrienes’ production stimulates the prostaglandin synthesis, protects the gastric mucosa | 250 mg/kg (BW) | |||||
| Model: Pylorus ligated rats reduced ulcer index stimulates the prostaglandin synthesis, protects the gastric mucosa | 250 mg/kg (BW) | |||||
| Anticancer | Bark | Aqueous | Anti-neoplastic activity reduced the growth of cancer cell upregulated the expression of downregulates the phospho Rb ( terminates the cell cycle progression at the G1/S phase in SiHa Induces apoptosis in HeLa (increasing the intracellular Ca2+ level, resulting in the loss of mitochondrial membrane potential) promotes the release of cytochrome-c, upregulated the caspase-3 expression downregulates downregulates viral oncoproteins | 0–80 µg/mL | [ | |
| Leaves | Benzene (B) | Cell: breast cancer cells (MCF-7) inhibit cell growth | Cell viability (IC50) | [ | ||
| Latex | Ethanol | Model: human neuroblastoma IMR 32 (cell inhibition: 4.8 μg/mL), human colorectal HCT 116, and human breast adenocarcinoma MDA MB 231 cell arrest and accumulation at G1 phase (HCT 116 and MDA MB 231) cell arrest and accumulation at G2/M phase ( induced apoptosis upregulation of pro-apoptotic ( downregulation of anti-apoptotic ( | [ | |||
| Bark | Methanol | Model: human breast adenocarcinoma maximum cell death stimulated early apoptosis and apoptosis (86.3% apoptotic cells in the G0/G1 population) upregulation of downregulated | 91 µg/mL | [ | ||
| Antimicrobial | Fruit | Ethanol | Bacteria strains/ Inhibition zone: | 15 mg/mL | [ | |
| Stem | Ethanol | Fungal strain: | 5 mL extract solution | [ | ||
| Antihelminthic | Latex | - | Earthworm: Paralysis in the earthworms and causes death | 250 µL | [ | |
| Hepatoprotective | Stem bark | Ethanol | Model: CCl4-induced hepatotoxicity in albino rats and paracetamol-induced hepatic damage in rats reduction in the serum aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) reduced the liver tissue injury reduced the negative effects caused by paracetamol metabolites and CCL3 radical | 200 mg/kg (BW) | [ | |
| Anticoagulant | Leaves | Methanol |
Prothrombin time (PT): 17.7 to 26.7 s Activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT): 47.7 to 72.3 s | 1 μg/μL | [ | |
| Fertility | Leaves (fresh and dry) | Aqueous | Model: Letrozole-induced PCOS upregulate the insulin resistance action stimulation of androgen production via synthesizing aromatase alleviated the steroid imbalances, thus regulating the estrous cycle reduction of the multiple ovarian cysts | 1 mg/kg (BW) | [ | |
|
| Antioxidant | Leaves | Methanol | DPPH scavenging | Inhibition percentage > 80% at 100 µg/mL | [ |
| Cell proliferation activity | Leaves | Methanol | Cell line: Human cervical cancer cell line (HeLa) | Cell viability: 50% at 100 µg/mL | [ |
Note: * IC50 = half maximal inhibition constant; ** BW = body weight.