| Literature DB >> 35359838 |
Mamta Dhiman1, Lakshika Sharma1, Abhishek Dadhich1, Poonam Dhawan2, M M Sharma1.
Abstract
Dengue has become a worldwide affliction despite incessant efforts to search for a cure for this long-lived disease. Optimistic consequences for dengue vaccine are implausible as the efficiency is tied to previous dengue virus (DENV) exposure and a very high cost is required for large-scale production of vaccine. Medicinal plants are idyllic substitutes to fight DENV infection since they constitute important components of traditional medicine and show antiviral properties, although the mechanism behind the action of bioactive compounds to obstruct viral replication is less explored and yet to be discovered. This review includes the existing traditional knowledge on how DENV infects and multiplies in the host cells, conscripting different medicinal plants that obtained bioactive compounds with anti-dengue properties, and the probable mechanism on how bioactive compounds modulate the host immune system during DENV infection. Moreover, different plant species having such bioactive compounds reported for anti-DENV efficiency should be validated scientifically via different in vitro and in vivo studies.Entities:
Keywords: bioactive compound; dengue; immunomodulatory response; plant medicaments; traditional medicine
Year: 2022 PMID: 35359838 PMCID: PMC8963989 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2022.750494
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
FIGURE 1Dengue infection cycle in human body.
Dengue seroprevalence by age, reported in some studies from India.
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| (Garg et al., 2011) ( | ( | ( | ( | |||||
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| Age (years) | Seroprevalence (%) | Age (years) | Seroprevalence (%) | Age (years) | Seroprevalence (%) | Age (years) | Seroprevalence (%) | Age (years) | Seroprevalence (%) |
| 0–9 | 47.60% | 5 | 40.70% | 9-May | 77% | 8-May | 33.00% | 0–10 | 13.70% |
| 19-Oct | 24.00% | 6 | 50.90% | 14-Oct | 90.30% | 17-Sep | 34.70% | 20-Nov | 30.10% |
| 20–29 | 26.80% | 7 | 58.60% | 15–19 | 91.70% | 18–45 | 32.30% | 21–30 | 45.10% |
| 30–39 | 25.00% | 8 | 67.40% | 20–29 | 96.30% | — | — | 31–40 | 59.70% |
| ≥40 | 23.30% | 9 | 70.80% | 30–40 | 98.80% | — | — | ≥40 | 64.10% |
| — | — | 10 | 73.40% | — | — | — | — | — | — |
| Total | 25.4 (95% CI = 22.3–28.7) | — | 59.6 (95% CI = 57.7–61.5) | — | 93 (95% CI = 91.1–94.6) | — | -— | — | 42.8 (CI = 40.9–44.7) |
FIGURE 2(A) Dengue cases in different regions of India 2021. (B) State-wise distribution of dengue cases (y-axis) in four states of India from 2015 to 2021 (x-axis) (Source: National Vector Borne disease Control Programme).
FIGURE 3(A) Comparative analysis of dengue incidences in different Asian countries (Source: WHO and European Center for disease Prevention and Control). (B) Number of dengue cases and deaths in India (2015–2021 May). (Source: National Vector Borne disease Control Programme).
List of plants studied for anti-dengue response based on ethnopharmacological use.
| Sr. No | Plant/Common name/Family | Geographical location | Part Used | Studied Model, DENV Serotype | Optimum dosage | Mode of action | Used cell line/animal/human model | Citation | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| 1 |
| Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, and Rajasthan | Dried powder of fruits | DENV 1–4 | IC50 values 1.54 μg/ml and 0.18 μg/ml | Extract contains peptides, subdued DENV infection in the initial phase of infection | Vero cells (kidney epithelial cells isolated from African green monkeys) and Huh7 cells (hepatocellular carcinoma cell line) |
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| Most effective peptide (designated Pep-RTYM) interacted with DENV particles and inhibited cellular entry | |||||||||||||
| 2 |
| Europe, China, northern Asia Minor, Indonesia, southern Siberia, in southern Russia, Japan, Sri Lanka, Australia, Burma, as well as southern Canada and Northern United States | Roots | DENV2 | Tatanan A, EC50 = 3.9 μM | Potentially affect DENV2, treatment constrained the initial steps of RNA synthesis as well as post translation modifications | Mosquito larva C6/36 cells were for DENV2 replication and Mouse kidney fibroblast cells (BHK-21) |
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| 3 |
| Widely cultivated in Southern and South eastern Asia, Malaysia | Methanolic extract | DENV 2,4 | Andrographolide, the maximum non-toxic dose 15.62 μg/ml | — | C6/36 cell line for DENV replication |
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| 4 |
| Asia, Asterids, Africa, Borneo, Indochina Australia, India, China, Indian Ocean | Whole plant | DENV serotype not mentioned | IC50 = 1.4 ± 2/1 μM | — | Vero cells (African green monkey kidney) |
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| 5 |
| Western and Eastern Cape Provinces Sandy slopes and scrub of the Northern, northwards into Namibia | Aerial parts | DENV-1–4 | IC50 values 100, 125, 78, and 100 μg/ml, respectively | It obsessed the efficiency to downregulate the synthesis of TNF-α, a type of cytokine allied with acute dengue disease | Mosquito cell line C6/36 and monkey kidney cell lines LLCMK2 |
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| 6 |
| Originate from South or Southeast Asia, most probably from Vietnam, western India, or China | Not mentioned | DENV-2 | IC50 = 17,91 μg/ml CC50 = 85,4 μg/ml | - | Huh7it-1 cells |
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| 7 |
| Indigenous to Sri Lanka and South India, recently cultivated in the tropical areas of Asia and America | Not mentioned | DENV-2 | CC50 = 183.74 and EC50 = 29.37 μg/ml | After treatment viral replication inhibition increased | Antiviral activity in Huh7it-1 cell lines infected by DENV |
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| 8 |
| Native to Mascarene Islands | Aerial parts | DENV1–4 | IC50 = 96.35, 16.75, 25.90, and 23.30 μg/ml for DENV1–4 individually | Extract-mediated DENV inhibition is allied to an erosion of infectivity | Human lung epithelial A549 cells, Vero cells, and human-derived Huh-7 hepatoma cells |
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| 9 |
| Japan, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Solomon Islands, Papua New Guinea, and Taiwan | Stem fruit, heartwood, and leaves | DENV-1 and DENV-2 | IC50 = 3.05–>100 μg/ml | — | DENV-1 766733A and DENV-2 PL046 (GenBank accession no. |
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| 10 |
| Mostly found in Sri Lanka | Leaves, stems, and roots | DENV-2 NS2B-NS3pro | IC50 ≤ 100 μg/ml | — | Dengue NS2B-NS3pro |
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| 11 |
| — | Leaves and stems | DENV-2 | — | -— | — |
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| 12 |
| Southeast Asian native to the Malaysian–Indonesian region | Rind | DENV-2 | IC50 = 1.75 μM | Restricts early phases of cell and virus interaction | African Green Monkey kidney cells (Vero) |
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| 13 |
| Indigenous to Iran and India and currently cultivated in France, Egypt, Italy, Hungary, Morocco, and United States. | Whole aerial body | DENV-1 | Maximum non-toxic dose: 23.44 μg/ml |
| HepG2 cells |
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| 14 |
| E. Asia—India, Sri Lanka, and Philippines | Leaves | DENV-2 | Least LC50 and LC90 values (5.968 and 7.493 μg/ml) | — | Monolayer culture of C6/C36 mosquito cell line |
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| 15 |
| Native to the Caribbean, Central America, and South America | Bark | DENV-2 | Catechin, CC50 = 1,000.0; μg/ml EC50 = 7.8 | — | Epithelial VERO cells and C6/36HT cells (from |
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| 16 |
| Indigenous to forests of Northern China and the Russian Far East and Korea | — | DENV-1, 2, 3, and 4 | Schisandrin A, EC50 = 28.1 ± 0.42 μM | Isolated bioactive compound, restricted RNA replication and translation as well as ominously raised DENV-reduced IFN-α gene expression | DENV-infected Huh-7 cells |
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| 17 |
| Southern part of India, Sri Lanka, and Malaysia | Leaves | DENV serotype not mentioned | Tetracontane, LC50 and LC90 values (1.288 and 1.992 μg/ml) | — | Monolayer culture of C6/C36 mosquito cell line |
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| 18 |
| Northern Hemisphere as well as Australia, New Zealand, Southeast Asia, and southern Africa | Designed and provided by CernoFina, LLC (Portland, ME) | DENV-1–4 | ZA, IC50 = 2.3 mM | — | Monkey kidney cell line LLCMK-2 |
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| 19 |
| United States and Canada | Purchased organosulfur garlic compounds | DENV-2 | — | Addition of | Cell lines Huh-7 and U937 |
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| 20 |
| Native to island nations of Southeast Asia and Thailand | Pericarp | DENV-1–4 | α-Mangostin, 20 μM | Remarkably reduced transcription of IL-6, TNF-α (cytokine), IP-10, RANTES, and MIP-1β (chemokine) | Human hepatocellular carcinoma (HepG2), (Huh-7) and African green monkey kidney (Vero) cells |
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| 21 |
| — | Purchased compounds | DENV-1–4 | Schisandrin A | Inductive efficacy of antiviral IFN-I exerts gene expression | DENV-infected Huh-7 cells |
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| 22 |
| Native to eastern Asia | Flower buds | DENV-2 | — | Subdue DENV2 multiplication | Human hepatoma, baby hamster kidney (BHK-21 and |
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| 23 |
| Native to the tropics of the Americas but now is widely cultivated in other tropical regions | Leaves | NM | — | Level of NS1 and envelope protein decreased in the THP-1 cells, erythrocyte damage also declines | DENV-infected THP-1 cells |
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| 24 |
| Vine native to Brazil | Leaves | DENV-2 | — | Downregulated IL-6, TNF-α, IL-10, and IFN-α secretion, cellular antigenic viral load, and secreted NS1 protein reduction | Buffy coat cells and peripheral blood mononuclear leukocytes |
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| 25 |
| Native to the tropics of the Americas but now is widely cultivated in other tropical regions | Leaves | — | — | Upsurge in cytokines of plasma in DENV infested AG129 mice with the dosage of freeze-dried 500 and 1,000 mg/kg | AG129 mice infected with DEN-2 |
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| 26 |
| Tamilnadu, Himachal Pradesh, Bihar, west Bengal, Nagpur, Punjab, and Rajasthan | Aerial parts | DENV-1–4 | Doses as high as 2 g/kg body weight for up to 1 week | — | AG129 mouse model |
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| 27 |
| Native to eastern Asia | Flower buds | DENV-2 | Honeysuckle (40 μl) | Up to 30% virus reduction was observed | C57/B6 and ICR suckling mouse models |
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| 28 |
| Warmer regions of India and Australia | Plant parts not specifically mentioned–herbal water | DENV serotype not mentioned | — | Leukocyte count ominously improved from 4,000 to 11,000 mm3 in both female and male patients | — |
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| 29 |
| Native to eastern Asia | Flower buds | DENV-2 | — | Upregulated miRNAs–let-7a showed highest expression level | — |
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| 30 |
| India, Australia, Sudan, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, South Africa, Brazil, and the southern United States | Stem | DENV serotype not mentioned | Stems of | Lowers body temperature and increases platelet counts more than 85,000. Again, after 24 h, they have normal platelet count and no symptoms of dengue | — |
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| 31 |
| Southeast Asian native to the Malaysian–Indonesian region | Rind | DENV-2 | — | Geraniin binds with DENV E, specifically at DIII region | — |
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| 32 |
| England, Iran, Spain, Iraq, Sicily, and Russia | Not specifically mentioned – | — | — | Polyphenolic compounds, chalcones, flavonoids and some phenolics were strong docking ligands for target of dengue virus protein | — |
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| 33 |
| Native to the Caribbean, Central America, and South America | Bark | DENV-2 | Catechin, CC50 = 1,000.0; μg/ml EC50 = 7.8 | Interactions of isolated compounds with the viral envelope protein | — |
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Effective bioactive compounds from plant sources against dengue infection.
| Sr. no | Phytochemical | Chemical structure | Class | Plant studied for anti-dengue activity | Plant Part used | Other plants containing this phytoconstituent | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Castanospermine |
| Tetrahydroxyindolizidine alkaloid |
| — | 1. |
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| 2 | Baicalin |
| Glycosyloxyflavone |
| Roots | 1. |
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| 2. | |||||||
| 3 | Gallic acid |
| Phenolic acid |
| Bark | 1 |
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| 2 | |||||||
| 4 | Quercetin |
| Flavonoid glycosides |
| — | 1 |
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| 2 | |||||||
| 3. | |||||||
| 5 | Epigallocatechin gallate |
| Polyphenols |
| — | — |
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| 6 | Galactomannan |
| Polysaccharides |
| Seed | 1. |
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| 2. | |||||||
| 3. | |||||||
| 4. | |||||||
| 5. | |||||||
| 7 | Glabranine, 7-O-methylglabranine |
| Flavonoid |
| Leaf, Flower | 1. |
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| 8 | Galactan |
| Hemicelluloses |
| Whole Plant | 1. |
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| 9 | Kappa carrageenan |
| Hydrophilic colloids |
| — | 1 |
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| 2. | |||||||
| 10 | 4-Hydroxypanduratin A, panduratin A | — | — |
| — | 1. |
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| 11 | Zosteric acid |
| Flavonoid |
| — | — |
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| 12 | Morin |
| Flavonoid |
| — | 1. |
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| 2. | |||||||
| 3. | |||||||
| 13 | Hyperoside |
| Flavonoid |
| Whole plants, aerial stem and leaves | 1. |
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| 2. | |||||||
| 3. | |||||||
| 4. | |||||||
| 14 | Fucoidan |
| Polysaccharides |
| Whole plants | 1 |
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| 2 | |||||||
| 3. | |||||||
| 4. | |||||||
| 5. | |||||||
| (L.) Le Jolis (Fucaceae) | |||||||
| 6. Vietnam Sargassum species | |||||||
| 15 | Daidzein |
| Bioflavonoid | — | — | 1 |
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| 2. | |||||||
| 3 |