| Literature DB >> 35566105 |
Pedro Silvino Pereira1, Carlos Vinicius Barros Oliveira2, Ana Josicleide Maia2, Maria Celeste Vega-Gomez3, Miriam Rolón3, Cathia Coronel3, Antônia Eliene Duarte2, Henrique Douglas Melo Coutinho4, Abolghasem Siyadatpanah5, Roghayeh Norouzi6, Seyed Jafar Adnani Sadati7, Polrat Wilairatana8, Teresinha Gonçalves Silva1.
Abstract
Cymbopogon winterianus, known as "citronella grass", is an important aromatic and medicinal tropical herbaceous plant. The essential oil of C. winterianus (EOCw) is popularly used to play an important role in improving human health due to its potential as a bioactive component. The present study aimed to identify the components of the essential oil of C. winterianus and verify its leishmanicidal and trypanocidal potential, as well as the cytotoxicity in mammalian cells, in vitro. The EOCw had geraniol (42.13%), citronellal (17.31%), and citronellol (16.91%) as major constituents. The essential oil only exhibited significant cytotoxicity in mammalian fibroblasts at concentrations greater than 250 μg/mL, while regarding antipromastigote and antiepimastigote activities, they presented values considered clinically relevant, since both had LC50 < 62.5 μg/mL. It can be concluded that this is a pioneer study on the potential of the essential oil of C. winterianus and its use against the parasites T. cruzi and L. brasiliensis, and its importance is also based on this fact. Additionally, according to the results, C. winterianus was effective in presenting values of clinical relevance and low toxicity and, therefore, an indicator of popular use.Entities:
Keywords: C. winterianus; cytotoxicity; geraniol; leishmanicidal; trypanocidal
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35566105 PMCID: PMC9099579 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27092753
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.927
Figure 1GC/MS chromatogram of the essential oil of C. winterianus with total ion current (TIC) peak reports. * Total Íon Current.
Chemical composition (%) of the essential oil of C. winterianus.
| Components | RT (min) a | (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Limonene | 17.88 | 4.24 |
| Citronellal | 25.27 | 17.31 |
| Citronellol | 29.70 | 16.91 |
| Geraniol | 31.29 | 42.13 |
| 39.37 | 2.69 | |
| δ-Cadinene | 46.65 | 1.05 |
| Elemol | 47.24 | 6.71 |
| Germacrene | 47.80 | 4.44 |
| Guaiol | 48.87 | 1.14 |
| Nerolidol | 52.70 | 3.38 |
| Total | 100.00 |
a Retention time.
Figure 2Cytotoxicity of the essential oil of C. winterianus, with the confidence interval for oil at 95% (87.07–107.10). LC50 was obtained through non-linear regression of means.
Survival of fibroblasts exposed to the essential oil of C. winterianus.
| Natural Product | Conc. µg/mL | %C | ±%DS |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 1000 | 0 | – |
| 500 | 0 | – | |
| 250 | 2.15 | 0.49 | |
| 125 | 35.79 | 0.80 | |
| 62.5 | 89.96 | 0.70 | |
| 31.5 | 90.96 | 0.77 |
Figure 3Cytotoxicity of the promastigote L. brasiliensis treated with essential oil of C. winterianus. LC50, with the confidence interval for oil at 95% (35.55–56.92). LC50 was obtained through non-linear regression of means.
Figure 4Cytotoxicity of the epimastigote T. cruzi treated with essential oil of C. winterianus. LC50 confidence interval for oil is 95% (50.63–104.10). LC50 was obtained through non-linear regression of means.
Survival of the promastigote L. brasiliensis treated with the essential oil of C. winterianus.
| Natural Product | Conc. µg/mL | %S | ±%DS | Conc. µg/mL | %S | ±%DS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 1000 | 0 | - | |||
| 500 | 0 | - | ||||
| 250 | 0 | - | ||||
| 125 | 0 | - | ||||
| 100 | 5.7 | 0.2 | ||||
| 62.5 | 39.13 | 2.11 | ||||
| 31.5 | 65.56 | 1.02 | ||||
| 25 | 10.7 | 0.4 | ||||
| 6.2 | 40.5 | 0.2 | ||||
| 3.2 | 83.6 | 0.9 |
Survival of the epimastigote T. cruzi treated with the essential oil of C. winterianus.
| Natural Product | Conc. µg/mL | %S | ± %DS | Conc. g/mL | %S | ±%DS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 1000 | 0 | – | |||
| 500 | 0 | – | ||||
| 250 | 0 | – | ||||
| 125 | 0 | – | ||||
| 100 | 0 | 0.7 | ||||
| 62.5 | 74.89 | 1.70 | ||||
| 50 | 6.6 | 0.5 | ||||
| 31.5 | 83.88 | 2.52 | ||||
| 10 | 15.4 | 0.6 | ||||
| 1.0 | 56.3 | 0.5 | ||||
| 0.5 | 85.4 | 0.6 | ||||
| 0.1 | 99.6 | 0.3 |
Figure 5Log-dose vs. cytotoxicity curves for NCTC 929 fibroblasts, L. braziliensis promastigotes, and T. cruzi epimastigotes were estimated by non-linear regression of means.