| Literature DB >> 36105486 |
Javad Sharifi-Rad1, Jesús Herrera-Bravo2,3, Prabhakar Semwal4, Sakshi Painuli5, Himani Badoni6, Shahira M Ezzat7,8, Mai M Farid9, Rana M Merghany10, Nora M Aborehab11, Mohamed A Salem12, Surjit Sen13,14, Krishnendu Acharya13, Natallia Lapava15, Miquel Martorell16,17, Bekzat Tynybekov18, Daniela Calina19, William C Cho20.
Abstract
Artemisia plants are traditional and ethnopharmacologically used to treat several diseases and in addition in food, spices, and beverages. The genus is widely distributed in all continents except the Antarctica, and traditional medicine has been used as antimalarial, antioxidant, anticancer, antinociceptive, anti-inflammatory, and antiviral agents. This review is aimed at systematizing scientific data on the geographical distribution, chemical composition, and pharmacological and toxicological profiles of the Artemisia genus. Data from the literature on Artemisia plants were taken using electronic databases such as PubMed/MEDLINE, Scopus, and Web of Science. Selected papers for this updated study included data about phytochemicals, preclinical pharmacological experimental studies with molecular mechanisms included, clinical studies, and toxicological and safety data. In addition, ancient texts and books were consulted. The essential oils and phytochemicals of the Artemisia genus have reported important biological activities, among them the artemisinin, a sesquiterpene lactone, with antimalarial activity. Artemisia absinthium L. is one of the most famous Artemisia spp. due to its use in the production of the absinthe drink which is restricted in most countries because of neurotoxicity. The analyzed studies confirmed that Artemisia plants have many traditional and pharmacological applications. However, scientific data are limited to clinical and toxicological research. Therefore, further research is needed on these aspects to understand the full therapeutic potential and molecular pharmacological mechanisms of this medicinal species.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36105486 PMCID: PMC9467740 DOI: 10.1155/2022/5628601
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 7.310
Figure 1Geographical distribution of Artemisia species.
Essential oil composition of the Artemisia genus from different geographical regions (2017–2021).
| Plant species | Parts used | Chemical composition | Region/country | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| L | Camphor; E-caryophyllene; eucalyptol; germacrene D; | Brazil | [ |
|
| AP | 1,8-Cineole; terpinen-4-ol; 2-isopropyltoluene; pinocarveol | China | [ |
|
| AP | Artemisia ketone; | China | [ |
| AP, F, L | (E)- | Russia | [ | |
|
| F, L |
| Italy | [ |
|
| L |
| China | [ |
|
| — |
| Portugal | [ |
| AP |
| Algeria | [ | |
| AP |
| Morocco | [ | |
| L, S |
| Tunisia | [ | |
|
| AP | p-Allylanisole; ocimene (e)- | Iran | [ |
| L | Methyl eugenol; elemicin; isoelemicin; ( | Poland | [ | |
|
| — |
| Russia | [ |
| AP | Cyclobutane ethanol; endo-borneol; germacrene D; eucalyptol; selin-6-en-4 | China | [ | |
| AP | Phellandrene; ascaridole; | India | [ | |
|
| AP | cis-Thujone; trans-thujone; vanillyl alcohol; nordavanone; cis, threo-davanafuran | Morocco | [ |
| AP | 3-Thujanone a; 3-thujanone b; camphor | Sweden | [ | |
| L |
| Tunisia | [ | |
|
| L | 2,3-Dehydro-1,8-Cineole; camphene; endo-borneol; bornyl acetate; geranyl isovalerate | Palestine | [ |
|
| AP | Methyl pentanoate; (E)-salvene; santolina triene; allyl isovalerate; | Jordan | [ |
| AP | Butanoic acid; | Saudi Arabia | [ | |
|
| AP |
| Argentina | [ |
|
| AP | Spathulenol; cloven; | Saudi Arabia | [ |
| L |
| Saudi Arabia | [ | |
|
| AP |
| India | [ |
|
| F, L |
| Spain | [ |
|
| AP | Laciniata furanone E; artedouglasia oxide C; pinocarvone; trans-pinocarveol; | Iran | [ |
|
| AP | Santolina triene; | China | [ |
|
| — | cis-Spiroether; Z- | India | [ |
|
| AP | Spathulenol; acenaphthene; davana ether; 2-propenoic acid, 3-phenyl-ethyl ester | Saudi Arabia | [ |
|
| AP | Acenaphthene; 2-cyclohexen-1-one, 3-methyl-6-(1-methylethyl) | Saudi Arabia | [ |
|
| AP | Caryophyllene; humulene; germacrene D; borneol; caryophyllene oxide | Brazil | [ |
| AP | Germacrene D; 1,8-cineole; | Lithuania | [ |
AP: areal part; L: leaves; F: flowers; —: not reported.
Chemical composition of Artemisia genus from different geographical regions.
| Plant species | Chemical composition | Region/country | References |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Caffeic acid; chlorogenic acid; isochlorogenic acid; protocatechuic acid; rosmarinic acid; quercitrin | Saudi Arabia | [ |
|
| Artemisinin; | - | [ |
|
| Arteannuin B; artemisinin; artemisinic acid; scopoletin | China | [ |
|
| Catechin; vanillic acid; caffeic acid; syringic acid; p-coumaric acid; gallic acid | Morocco | [ |
|
| Neochlorogenic acid; chlorogenic acid; cryptochlorogenic acid; caffeic acid; 1,3-dicaffeoylquinic acid; 3,4-dicaffeoylquinic acid; 3,5-dicaffeoylquinic acid; 4,5-dicaffeoylquinic acid | China | [ |
|
| Calotropoleanyl ester; | Pakistan | [ |
|
| Coumarins; phenolics; flavonoids; caffeoylquinic acids; diterpene glycosides | Korea | [ |
|
| Camphor; hanphillin; alkhanin; terpinen-4-ol; | Morocco | [ |
|
| 5-Hydroxy-3,7,4′-trimethoxyflavone; ludartin; maackiain; lupeol; cis-matricaria ester; trans-matricaria ester; 6-methoxy-7,8-methylenedioxy coumarin | China | [ |
|
|
| China | [ |
|
| 1-(3-Hydroxyphenyl)-2-(5-hydroxy-3-methoxyphenyl)ethane; 1-(3-hydroxyphenyl)-2-(3,5-dihydroxyphenyl)ethane | China | [ |
|
| Blumenol A; (+)-dehydrovomifoliol; (+)-3-hydroxy- | China | [ |
|
| n-Hexadecanoic acid; 9,12,15-(Z,Z,Z)-octadecatrienoic acid; 2-(4a,8-dimethyl-7-oxo-1,2,3,4,4a,7-hexahydronaphthalen-2-yl)-propionic acid; 8-nitro-(1H)quinolin-4-ol-2-one; neophytadiene | Ukraine | [ |
|
| Citrusin A; alaschanioside A; coniferin; citrusin B; syringaresinol- | China | [ |
|
| Eugenol; capillene; spathulenol; capillin; scoparone; tricosane; heptacosane; nonacosane; stigmasterol; tritriacontane | Serbia | [ |
| 4-Pyridone glucoside; polyacetylene glucosides | China | [ | |
| Quercetin-3-O- | China | [ | |
|
| Narcisin; quercetin; luteolin; kaempferol; genkwanin; astragalin; isorhamnetin-3-O- | Iran | [ |
|
| 3,5-Dicaffeoylquinic acid; 4,5-dicaffeoylquinic acid; 3,5,3′,4′-tetrahydroxy; 7,5′-methoxy | Iran | [ |
|
| Artanoic acid; luteolin; 6-methoxyluteolin; eupatilin; o-coumaric acid; vanillic acid; protocatechuic acid; 4-hydroxyphenyl acetate; vulgarin | Vietnam | [ |
Preclinical pharmacological studies of different Artemisia species.
| Extract/compound | Doses |
| Route of administration/assay | Model/cells | Activity | Potential effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 500 mg/kg |
| Orally | Rats | Antiulcer | Gastroprotective, ↑proteins of mucus content | [ |
|
| 150–250 mg/kg |
| Orally | Swiss albino mice | Gastroprotective compared to standard drug vincristine | [ | |
|
| 62.5, 125, 250, 500 |
| MTT | MCF7 cells | Anticancer | ↑cytotoxicity IC50 = 221–500 | [ |
|
| 100 |
| SRB | DLD-1 cells | ↑cytotoxicity IC50 = 15.42–23.4 | [ | |
|
| 0.01–1.0 mg /mL |
| MTT | Hepatocellular carcinoma cells | ↑apoptosis IC50 = 0.1 mg/mL | [ | |
|
| 20, 25 g/mL |
| MTT | MCF-7 MDA-MB231 | ↑cancer cells suppression | [ | |
|
| 6.25–200 |
| MTS | Apoptosis-proficient HL60 apoptosis-resistant K562 | HL-60: IC50 = 75 | [ | |
|
| 250 mg/kg |
| Orally | STZ-induced diabetic rats | Antidiabetic | ↓TGL, ↓LDL, ↓HDL | [ |
|
| PMI 5011 (1%) |
| Diet | KK-Ay mice | ↑sensitivity of insulin, ↑insulin receptor signaling | [ | |
|
| 0.39 g/kg |
| Orally | Alloxan-induced diabetic rats | ↓blood glucose, ↑RBC, ↑WBC, ↑PCV, ↑ESR, ↑neutrophils, ↓heart rate | [ | |
|
| 300, 400, 500 mg/kg |
| Orally | Sprague-Dawley rats | Antihypertensive | ↓systolic blood pressure in normotensive/hypertensive rats | [ |
|
| 50, 100, 200 mg/kg |
| Orally | Kunming mice, NIH mice | Hepatoprotective | ↓inflammatory cells, ↓liver lipid peroxidation, ↑SOD, ↑GPx | [ |
|
| 150, 300, 600 mg/kg |
| i.p. | Balb-C mice | ↑liver structure, ↓parenchyma congestion, ↓cellular swelling, ↓apoptotic cells | [ | |
|
| 32–512 |
| Agar disk diffusion method | 15 bacterial strains | Antibacterial | Methanol, hexane extracts, ↑inhibition against phytopathogens | [ |
|
| 10.0, 5.0, 2.5, 1.0, 0.5 |
| Agar disc diffusion method. |
| IC50 = 0.5–2.5 | [ | |
|
| 250, 500, 1000, 2000, 4000 |
| (mic90) growth inhibition | Protozoan parasite (blastocystis) | Antiprotozoal | IC5 = 4000 | [ |
|
| 0.33 |
| Inverted petri plate technique |
| Antifungal | IC50 = 1.6 | [ |
|
| EO = 470 mg/kg ethanol extract = 450 mg/kg |
| i.p. | Wistar rats | Antidepressant | ↑immobility time in the FST, ↓other activities in the OFT depressors of SNC | [ |
|
| 125, 250, 500, 1000 mg/kg |
| i.p. | Swiss albino mice | ↓immobility period in the fst and tst.dose-dependent antidepressant activity | [ | |
|
| 50, 100, 300 mg/kg |
| i.p. | Swiss albino mice | Antiepileptic | Anticonvulsant activities were noticed using EPM and MBT | [ |
|
| 50, 100, 200, 400 mg/kg |
| Orally | Mice | Anticonvulsivant effect through the GABA-ergic neuron | [ | |
|
| 100, 200 mg/kg |
| i.p. | Swiss albino mice | Anti-Alzheimer | Confirmation of the anti-Alzheimer's activity of ethanol extract after object recognition and y-maze tests | [ |
|
| 100, 200 mg/kg |
| i.p. | Swiss albino mice | Anti-Parkinson | ↓catalepsy score in animals treated with ethanolic extract, ↑locomotor activity, ↑rotarod readings | [ |
|
| 2 g/L |
| ABTS, ORAC, FRAP | — | Antioxidant | ↑protection against the oxidative deterioration of oil-in-water emulsion | [ |
|
| 20 |
| DPPH | — | ↑antioxidant activity by phenolics | [ | |
|
| 50–250 |
| DPPH | — | Antioxidant activity of ethanolic extract > aqueous extract | [ | |
|
| 0.25; 0.125; 0.0625; 0.0312; 0.0156; 0.0078; 0.0039; 0.0019; 0.0009; 0.00048 mg/mL |
| DPPH | — | ↑free radical scavenging activity RC50 = 0.03157, 0.0456 mg/mL | [ | |
|
| 10; 8.6; 6.5; 6.5; 3.3; 2.5; 2 |
| Method recommended by WHO |
| Insecticidal | LC50 = 5 | [ |
|
| — |
| Method recommended by WHO |
| The EO of | [ | |
|
| 25, 50, 100 mg/mL |
| Scolicidal tests |
| ↓effect on the protoscolices of hydatid cysts | [ | |
|
| 1, 5, 10, 50, 100, 500, 1000 ppm |
| Method recommended by WHO |
| LC50 = 65.8 ppm in 1 h and 18.6 ppm in 24 h, | [ | |
|
| 20, 40, 80 mg/mL |
| Toxicity bioassay |
| Insecticidal properties, ↑activity of DCM extract | [ | |
|
| 20 mg/site |
| Topically | BALB/C mice | Antiatopic dermatitis | ↓clinical symptoms in a DNFB mouse model that induced lesions, ↓inflammatory cytokines | [ |
|
| 150, 300 mg/kg |
| — | Sprague-Dawley rats | Nephroprotective | ↓DNA damages, dose = 300 mg/kg, ↓oxidative stress | [ |
|
| 10 mg/mouse/day |
| Topically | Dermatophagoides farinae-sensitized NC/NGA mice | Anti-inflammatory, anti-atopic dermatitis | ↓dermatitis scores, ↓bleeding, ↓hyperkeratosis, ↓hypertrophy in the dorsal skin and ear of the epidermis, ↓histamine | [ |
|
| 200, 400 mg/kg |
| Orally | Wistar rats | Anti-inflammatory, antioxidative | ↓level of hepatic enzymes, ↑renal antioxidant enzymes | [ |
|
| 250, 500, 750, 1000 mg/kg |
| Orally | ICR mice infected with | Antimalarial |
| [ |
|
| 0–2 mg/mL 10% DMSO |
| Heme biocrystallization and inhibition assay | IC50 = 0.778 mg/mL, IC50 = 0.998 mg/mL | [ | ||
|
| — |
| Parasite lactate dehydrogenase (pLDH) |
| IC50 = 3.27 nM, IC50 = 4.95 nM | [ | |
|
| Aqueous extract 1000 mg/kg/day, hydro alcoholic extract 500 mg/kg/day |
| - |
| ↑activity on malaria of artemisinin, both extracts of | [ | |
↑: increase; ↓: decrease; MTT: 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyl-2H-tetrazolium bromide; DCM: dichloromethane; DNFB: 2,4-dinitrofluorobenzene; EPM: elevated plus maze; ESR: erythrocyte sedimentation rate; EO: essential oil; FST: forced swimming test; HDL: high-density lipoprotein; LDL: low-density lipoprotein; MBT: marble-burying test; MIC: minimum inhibitory concentration; OFT: open-field test; PCV: packed cell volume; RBC: red blood cell; SRB: sulforhodamine B; TC: total cholesterol; TGL: triglycerides; WBC: white blood cell; WHO: World Health Organization: i.p.: intraperitoneally; FRAP: ferric-reducing ability of plasma; ABTS: 2,2′-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid; ORAC: oxygen radical absorbance capacity.
Figure 2Illustrative scheme with the most representative pharmacological properties of bioactives of Artemisia spp. and their potential mechanisms of action. ↑: increase; ↓: decrease; SOD: superoxide dismutase; GSH: glutathione; MEK/ERK: mitogen-activated extracellular signal-regulated kinase/extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase; Bcl-2: B-cell lymphoma 2; iNOS: inducible nitric oxide synthase; PGE2: prostaglandin E2; COX-2: cyclooxygenase-2; NF-κB: nuclear factor kappa B; TNF-α: tumor necrosis factor α; AMPK: adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase; AST: aspartate aminotransferase; GLUT4: glucose transporter type 4; AchE: acetylcholinesterase; MAO: monoamine oxidase; ROS: reactive oxygen species; PKC: protein kinase C; JNK: Jun N-terminal kinase; ALT: alanine transaminase; TTG: tissue transglutaminase antibody.
Toxicological studies of Artemisia species.
| Extract/compound | Doses |
| Route of administration | Model | Effect | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 1000, 2000, 2500 mg/kg |
| i.p. | Wistar albino rats | ↓carbohydrate, protein, lipid metabolisms, unfavourable effect on nutritional benefits, ↓hematological parameters, ↓toxicity when used acutely in rats | [ |
|
| 300, 2000, 5000 mg/kg |
| Orally | Swiss albino mice | No toxic or lethal reactions of all the doses | [ |
|
| 0.10, 0.50, 1.0 g/kg |
| Orally | Swiss albino mice | No significant toxic effect LD50 > 1 g/kg BW | [ |
|
| 500 mg/kg, 1 and 3 g/kg |
| Orally | Swiss albino mice |
| [ |
|
| — |
| — | Brine shrimp | LC50 = 10.4–23.3 | [ |
|
| 1.5–5.5 g/kg i.t., 2–24 g/kg o.p. |
| i.p., orally | BALB/C mice, Wistar rats | Nontoxic when given acutely, low chronic toxicity, hepatoprotective effect in high doses | [ |
| Artemether | 0, 20, 40, 80 mg/kg i.m., 0, 50, 150, 600 mg/kg p.o. |
| i.m., orally | Beagle dogs | High i.m. doses: neurological damage, dose = 20 mg/kg: minimal effects occurred | [ |
| Artemether, artesunate | 30–100 mg/kg/day |
| i.m. | Swiss albino mice | Artemether neurotoxicity is significantly more neurotoxic than i.m. artesunate | [ |