| Literature DB >> 36234965 |
Halina Ekiert1, Marta Klimek-Szczykutowicz2, Agnieszka Rzepiela3, Paweł Klin4, Agnieszka Szopa1.
Abstract
Artemisia species play a vital role in traditional and contemporary medicine. Among them, Artemisia abrotanum, Artemisia absinthium, Artemisia annua, Artemisia dracunculus, and Artemisia vulgaris are the most popular. The chemical composition and bioactivity of these species have been extensively studied. Studies on these species have confirmed their traditional applications and documented new pharmacological directions and their valuable and potential applications in cosmetology. Artemisia ssp. primarily contain sesquiterpenoid lactones, coumarins, flavonoids, and phenolic acids. Essential oils obtained from these species are of great biological importance. Extracts from Artemisia ssp. have been scientifically proven to exhibit, among others, hepatoprotective, neuroprotective, antidepressant, cytotoxic, and digestion-stimulating activities. In addition, their application in cosmetic products is currently the subject of several studies. Essential oils or extracts from different parts of Artemisia ssp. have been characterized by antibacterial, antifungal, and antioxidant activities. Products with Artemisia extracts, essential oils, or individual compounds can be used on skin, hair, and nails. Artemisia products are also used as ingredients in skincare cosmetics, such as creams, shampoos, essences, serums, masks, lotions, and tonics. This review focuses especially on elucidating the importance of the most popular/important species of the Artemisia genus in the cosmetic industry.Entities:
Keywords: Artemisia abrotanum; Artemisia absinthium; Artemisia annua; Artemisia dracunculus; Artemisia vulgaris; chemical composition; cosmetic applications; pharmacological activities; safety of use
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36234965 PMCID: PMC9571683 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27196427
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.927
Comparison of botanical characteristics and occurrence of Artemisia ssp.
| Species | Height | Leaves | Flowers | Fruits | Occurrence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.7–1.5 m [ | Gray-green leaves with numerous covering hairs on the upper side; the smooth underside of the leaves; in the lower part of the stem are doubly pinnate with ensiform sections; in the upper parts a singly pinnate, tripartite, also with ensiform shape [ | Tiny yellow tubular flowers, gathered in spherical or ovoid-spherical hanging heads, panicle forms | Small oblong achenes [ | Central Asia (Armenia, Iran, and Russia), Asia Minor (Turkey), Central and North Europe Europe (e.g., Albania and Croatia) [ | |
| 0.8–1.5 m [ | Gray-green color, densely pubescent on both sides; basal leaves with long petioles, triangular or oval blade, bi- or tripinnatisect, the lower leaves not intensely divided, and the lanceolate top leaves [ | Capitulum inflorescences gathered in loose panicles from the axils of the leaves; light-yellow ligulate female flowers, and tubular hermaphroditic flowers [ | Small achene with brown stripes [ | Europe, West Asia, and North Africa; introduced and acclimatized in North and South America and Australia [ | |
| 0.3–1 m [ | Alternate arrangement [ | Flower heads in raceme-like inflorescences, small, spherical, yellow-green, only tubular flowers [ | Small, long achenes [ | Southeastern Europe, Western Asia, North and South America, Australia [ | |
| 0.5–1.5 m [ | Alternate, sessile, the lower leaves tripartite at the apex, the middle and upper leaves lanceolate, tip of the leaf sharp and the leaf blade margins entire [ | Yellow, tubular flowers in hanging, spherical capitula forming loose panicles [ | Small achenes [ | Central Asia, South Europe, Eastern Europe, North America [ | |
| 0.5–2.5 m [ | Dense and alternate, primarily in the upper parts of the stem, the lower leaves with short petioles divided into segments and feathery shape, the middle and upper ones smaller and single or double pinnate, the dorsal side of the leaves with dark green color, the ventral side whitish and tomentose [ | Small, almost bare, yellowish or brown-red flowers embedded in small baskets form heavily branched panicles with numerous lanceolate bracts at the top of the shoots, inflorescences with ligulate flowers and tubular flowers [ | Small dark brown shiny achenes [ | Europe, Asia, abundantly in North America [ |
Figure 1Chemical structure of sesquiterpenoid lactones found in Artemisia species: artemisinin (a); psilostachyin (b); artemisin (c); absinthin (d).
Chemical composition of extracts from aerial parts of Artemisia ssp.
| Species | Sesquiterpenoid Lactones | Flavonoids | Coumarins | Phenolic Acids |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| artemisin, santonin [ | apigenin, artemetin, casticin centaureidine, hyperoside, isoquercitrin, kaempferol, luteolin, myricetin, patuletin, rutoside, quercetin, quercetol [ | coumarin, esculetin, herniarin, isofraxidine, scopoletin, umbelliferone [ | caffeic acid, caftaric acid, | |
| absintholide, absinthin, anabsin, anabsinthin, arabsin, artabin, artabsin, artenolide, caruifolin D, deacetyloglobicin, germacranolide, hydroxypelenolide, isoabsinthin, ketopelenolide, ketopepenolid-A, matricin, parishine B and C, β-santonin, santonin-related lactones [ | apigenin, artemetin, | coumarin, herniarin [ | caffeic acid, 5′-O-caffeoylquinic acid, chlorogenic acid, coumaric acid, | |
| artemisinic acid, artemisinin, artannuin B [ | acacetin, apigenin, apigenin 6-C-arabinosyl-8-C-glucoside, apigenin 6-C-glucosyl-8-C-arabinoside, apigenin derivatives, artemetin, astragalin, camferol, casticin, chrysin, chrysoeriol, chrysoeriol rutinoside, chrysosplenol C, chrysosplenol D, chrysosplentin, cinaroside, cirsilineol, dihydroartemisinin, 3,5-dihydroxy-3′, 4′, 6,7-tetramethoxyflavone, 3,5-dihydroxy-6,3′, 4′-tetramethoxyflavone, 3,5-dihydroxy-6,7,4′-trimethoxyflavone, 3,5-dimethoxyquercetagentin, 3,4′-dimethyl-quercetagentin ether, ether 3-methyl-quercetin, quercetin 3-glucoside, eupatin, eupatorine, 7-O-glucoside of diosmetin, 3-O-glucoside of kaempferol, 3-O-glucoside of quercetin, 3-O-hexoside of marnsetin, isocempheride, isoquercetin, isorhamnetin, isorhamnetin derivatives, isorhamnetin 3-O-glucoside, isovitexin, jaceidin, kaempferol, kaempferol derivatives, kirsiliol, kirsimaritin, laricitrin, luteolin, luteolin derivatives, luteolin 7-O-glucoside, marnsetin glucoside, marnsetin, 8-methoxykaempferol, 3-methoxy-kaempferol glucoside, 7-methyl-luteolin ether, 3-O-methylquercetagentin, micanine, myrcetin, patulentin glucoside, quercetin, quercetin derivatives, quercetin 3-O-galactoside, quercimeritin, retina, rhamnetine, rutoside, syringetin, tamarixetine [ | coumarin, esculetin, isofraxidine, | caffeic acid, 4-caffeoyl-3,5-di-succinylquinic acid, 3,5-caffeoyletherquinic acid, 3-caffeoylquinic acid, 4-caffeoylquinic acid, chlorogenic acid, coumaric acid, 3,4-di-caffeoylquinic acid, 3,5-di-caffeoylquinic acid, 3,5-di-O-caffeoylquinic acid, 4,5-di-O-caffeoylquinic acid, diferulcaffeoylquinic acid, 3,4-diferuloquinic acid, 3,5-diferuloquinic acid, 4,5-diferuloquinic acid, ferulic acid, 3-feruloquinic acid, 4-feruloquinic acid, 5-feruloquinic acid, rosmarinic acid [ | |
| artemether, dihydroartemisinin, [ | anangenin, apigenin, biocovertsetin, davidigenin, 5,7-dihydroxy flavone, 2′,4′-dihydroxy-4-methoxydihydrochalcone syn, 7,3′-dimethyleriodictyol, DMC-2; 4-O-methyldavidigenin, estragoniside, estroside, 7- | arethinol, aridiodiol, artemidiol, artemidine, artemidinol, artemidynal ether, artidin, capillarin, coumarin, dacumerin, 3,4-dehydroherniarin, (+)-( | caffeic acid, caffeoylquinic acid, chicory acid, chlorogenic acid, | |
| artemisinin, 1,2,3,4-diepoxy-11(13)-eudesmen-12,8-olide, psilostachyin, psilostachyin C, vulgarin, yomogin [ | apigenin, chrysoeriol, diosmetin, eriodictyol, eupafolin, homoeriodictyol, hyperoside, isorhamnetin, jaceosidin, kaempferol 3-glucoside, kaempferol 7-glucoside, kaempferol 3-rhamnoside, kaempferol 3-rutinoside, luteolin, luteolin 7-glucoside, quercetin, quercetin 3-galactoside, quercetin 3-glucoside, rutoside, tricine, vitexin [ | esculin, esculetin, umbelliferone [ | caffeic acid, 3-O-caffeoylquinic acid, 5-O-caffeoylquinic acid, 1,5-di-O-caffeoylquinic acid, 3,5-di-O-caffeoylquinic acid, 4,5-O-di-caffeoylquinic acid, 5-feruloylquinic acid, protocatechuic acid glucoside, quinic acid [ |
Figure 2Chemical structure of flavonoids found in Artemisia species: artemetin (a); casticin (b).
Figure 3Chemical structure of coumarins found in Artemisia species: coumarin (a); esculetin (b); scopoline (c); herniarin (d).
Figure 4Chemical structure of phenolic acids found in Artemisia species: caffeic acid (a); p-coumaric acid (b); chlorogenic acid (c); ferulic acid (d).
Chemical composition of essential oil from Artemisia species.
| Species | Sesquiterpenoids | Monoterpenoids | Diterpenoids | Triterpenoids | Phenylpropanoid Derivatives | Other Compounds |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| δ-amorphene, aromadendrene, artedouglasia C, artedouglasia oxide A, artedouglasia oxide B, artedouglasia oxide D, bicyclogermacrene, | borneol, bornyl acetate, camphene, camphor, 3 (10) -carene-2-ol, | lupeol, phytol isomer [ | agarospirol [ | estragol (methyl chavicol), elemicine [ | |
|
| 1-( | nd 1 | estragole, methyleugenol [ | nd | ||
|
| aristolon, bicyclogermacrene, β-bourbonene, β-cadinene, γ-cadinene, δ-cadinene, | vulgarone [ | nd | nd | arteannuic acid, 2-H-1-benzopiranzone, benzyl benzoate, benzyl 3-methylbutanacetate, 1-dodekene, ethyl 2-methylbutanoate, eudesm-7(11)-en-4-ol, hexanal, 2-hexenyl 2-methylbutanoate, | |
|
| acoradiene, ar-curcumen, α-bergamotene, bicyclermacren, α-bisabolol, β-bisabolen, | allocimene, artemisinic ketone, borneol, bornyl acetate, camphene, camphor, 4-carene, ∆3-carene, carvacrol, | phytol [ | squalene [ | ( | |
|
| aromadendrene, α- | phytol, γ-terpineol [ | nd | nd | nd |
1 nd—no data.
Ethnopharmacological uses of Artemisia species.
| Species | Traditional Activity | Traditional Medicine | References |
|---|---|---|---|
liver diseases contractile states of the bile ducts stagnation of or insufficient bile secretion stimulate menstruation | Europe | [ | |
parasitic diseases and digestive ailments treating jaundice treating constipation treating obesity treating splenomegaly treating anemia treating insomnia treating bladder diseases treating menstrual cramps treating injuries and nonhealing wounds | Europe | [ | |
digestive aid treating chronic fever treating hepatitis treating edema | Hindu medicine (Unani) | [ | |
treating jaundice treating bacterial dysentery treating fever treating bleeding wounds treating hemorrhoids | China and India | [ | |
ailments of the digestive system an appetite and digestive stimulant | Europe | [ | |
treatment of helminthiasis treatment intestinal smooth muscle spasms treatment in the regulation of the menstrual cycle | Hindu traditional medicine (Ayurveda) | [ | |
treatment of gingivitis treatment foot and mouth diseases | Arabia | [ | |
treating irritation treating allergic rashes treating gastritis | Central Asia | [ | |
stimulates the secretion of gastric juice relaxant for the gastrointestinal tract and bile ducts relieving colic laxative effect in the treatment of obesity | Europe | [ | |
liver inflammation and obstruction, treating enlarged liver or spleen treating nephrolithiasis, treating chronic fever treating dysmenorrhea recommended for inducing labor or miscarriage | Hindu medicine (Unani) | [ |
Biological activities of Artemisia species.
| Direction of Activity | Species | Extract/Essential Oil | Part | Classification | Compounds | Model/Assay | Short Description of Performed Studies | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| Essential oil | Aerial part | Monoterpenoids | Borneol, cymene, camphor, terpineol, 1,8-cineole, and aromadendrene | In vitro | Decrease in the survival of neoplastic cells of the RD (rhabdomyosarcoma). The viability of RD cells after the application of the essential oil at concentrations of 25, 50, and 100 μg/mL was 29.679%, 20.833%, and 20.256%, respectively. | [ |
| Methanolic extract | Leaves | Phenolic acids | Chlorogenic and isochlorogenic acids | In vitro | Methanolic extract of | [ | ||
|
| hexane, ethyl acetate, acetone, ethanol, acetonitrile and supercritical carbon dioxide (scCO2) | Leaves | Polyphenols, alkamides | nt * | In vitro (mouse lymphoma L5178YD cells) | Inhibition of the proliferation of mouse lymphoma cells (L5178YD) due to the presence of polyphenols and alkamides in leaf extracts. In the control group the tumor cell count was 17.969 × 106, the acetonitrile extract from | [ | |
|
|
| Essential oil and isolated flavonoids | Aerial part | Monoterpenoids, flavonoids | 1,8-Cineole, davanone, linalool, centaureidine dimethylether, casticin and quercetin | In vivo | Relief of symptoms of allergic rhinitis with possible concomitant allergic conjunctivitis, symptoms of bronchial obstruction, and symptoms of exercise-induced asthma by using a nasal spray with a mixture of essential oils and flavonoids present in | [ |
|
|
| Ethanol | Herb | nt | nt | In vivo | Change in postprandial hemodynamics in the gastric digestive phase with increased hyperemia, probably due to the effects of bitter compounds contained in the herb of the plant. | [ |
|
|
| nt | Aerial part | nt | nt | In vivo | Enrichment of sheep fodder with silage containing | [ |
| nt | Aerial part | nt | nt | In vivo | Improvement in nutrient supply and digestion, faster growth, improvement in carcass quality, and the amount of fatty acids among Hanwoo steers. | [ | ||
|
|
| carbon tetrachloride, chloroform, methanol, ethanol, hexane | Aerial part and root | nt | nt | In vivo (rats) | Decrease in gastric juice volume, reduction in gastric acid and pepsin secretion, and decrease in the digestion rate. | [ |
|
|
| Hydro-methanol | Herb | nt | nt | In vivo (rats) | [ | |
| Methanol | Herb | nt | nt | In vivo (rats) | Methanolic extracts from the herb of the plant (in dose 50 mg/kg) protect liver cells by reducing ALAT (alanine aminotransferase) and ASPAT (aspartate aminotransferase) levels and by reducing oxidative damage. | [ | ||
| Aqueous | Herb | nt | nt | In vivo (mice) | Protection of the liver due to the immunomodulatory and/or antioxidant properties of | [ | ||
|
| Hydro-ethanol | Herb | nt | nt | In vivo (rats) | The extract (at dose 50, 100, or 200 mg/kg) decreased the levels of ALAT, ASPAT, alkaline phosphatase, and total bilirubin and increased total protein levels. | [ | |
|
| Hydro-ethanol | Aerial part | nt | nt | In vivo (mice) | Prophylactic protective effect limiting inflammation, cellular edema, apoptotic cell count, and hyperemia of the hepatic parenchyma of hydro-ethanolic extract (at dose 600 mg/kg). | [ | |
|
|
| Chloroform and methanol | Herb | Sesquiterpenoids | Yomogin and 1,2,3,4-diepoxy-11(13)-eudesmen-12,8-olide | In vivo (guinea pigs) | Antagonism toward H1 histamine receptors. | [ |
|
|
| Aqueous and an ethanolic | Aerial part | nt | nt | In vivo (sheep) | Extracts from | [ |
| Essential oil | Aerial part | nt | nt | In vivo (mice) | Lethal effect on | [ | ||
| Ethanolic | Herb | nt | nt | In vivo (rabbits) | Lethal effect of | [ | ||
| Ethanolic extract | Aerial part | nt | nt | In vivo (sheep), in vitro (parasite motility inhibition test) | Lethal effect on | [ | ||
|
| Methanol | Herb | nt | nt | In vivo (rats) | Extract (at dose 300 mg/kg) inhibited activity against | [ | |
|
|
| Aqueous and ethanolic extracts | Aerial part | nt | nt | In vitro (mice) | Lethal effect of aqueous and ethanolic extracts from | [ |
| Hydro-ethanolic | Herb | nt | nt | In vitro (chloroquine-resistant (K1) and chloroquine-sensitive (CY27) strains of | Lethal effect of the hydro-ethanolic extract | [ | ||
| nt | Herb powdered | nt | nt | In vivo (human) | Lethal effect of capsuled powdered herb of | [ | ||
| Essential oil | Aerial part | nt | nt | In vitro | Lethal activity against the promastigotes and amastigotes forms of the protozoa | [ | ||
| Ethanol | Aerial part | Flavonoids, sesquiterpenoid lactone | Artemetin, casticin, hydroxypelenolide | In vitro | Lethal activity in vitro against | [ | ||
| Essential oil | Aerial part | Sesquiterpenoids | ( | In vitro | Lethal effect of the essential oil on | [ | ||
| Aqueous and ethanolic | Aerial part | Sesquiterpenoids lactones | Artemisinin, dihydroartemisinin | In vitro | Inhibition (100%) of | [ | ||
| Aqueous | Aerial part | nt | nt | In vitro | Inhibition (88.9%) of | [ | ||
|
| Methanol, ethanol, aqueous | Herb | Sesquiterpene lactone | Artemisinin | In vivo/In vitro | Lethal activity against | [ | |
| n-Hexane, ethanol, and water | Leaves and seeds | nt | nt | In vitro | Compounds present in | [ | ||
|
| Hydro-ethanol | Herb | nt | nt | In vitro | The extract (at dose (100–1000 μg/mL) inhibited the development of the promastigote form of | [ | |
|
|
| Ethanolic | Herb | nt | nt | In vivo (mice) | Induction of dendritic cell maturation by increasing the level of CD40 surface expression and by induction of cytokines. It was found that at 100 μg/mL extract the proliferation of T-lymphocytes was reduced by 78.2% relative to the control. | [ |
| nt | Herb | Polysaccharides | nt | In vivo (mice) | Induction of TH1 immune response and stimulation of nitric oxide production by macrophages. | [ | ||
|
|
| Ethanol | Herb | nt | nt | In vitro/In vivo | Inhibition of lymphocyte proliferation and reduction in IgG, IgG1, and IgG2b antibody levels after the administration of | [ |
| nt | Herb | Sesquiterpene lactone | Artemisinin | In vivo (mice) | Artemisinin obtained from | [ | ||
|
| Aqueous | Herb | nt | nt | In vivo (mice) | The extract (at dose 100 mg/kg) reduced IL-17 (interleukin 17) and IFN-γ (interferon gamma) production and intensification of the phagocytosis process carried out by macrophages. | [ | |
| Aqueous | Herb | nt | nt | In vivo (mice) | Lowering of IL-17 and IL-23 (interleukin-23) levels and reduction in the infiltration of leukocytes into brain cells. | [ | ||
| Hydro-ethanol | Leaves | nt | nt | In vivo (mice) | Increased neutrophil levels and decreased lymphocyte levels after intraperitoneal administration of the hydroethanolic extract from the leaves (at dose 200 mg/kg). | [ | ||
|
|
| Methanol | Leaves | nt | nt | In vitro | Inhibition of proliferation of breast cancer cells of MDA-MB-231 (50% at 20 g/mL) and MCF-7 lines (50%, at 25 g/mL). | [ |
| Essential oil | Aerial part | Sesquiterpenoids | In vitro | The essential oil, in particular ( | [ | |||
|
| Ethyl acetate | Aerial part | Polyphenols | Caffeic acid, syringic aldehyde, dicaffeoylquinic acid isomer, quercetin 3-O-galactoside, dicaffeoylquinic acid isomer, mearnsetin 3-O-hexoside isomer, kaempferol 3-O-glucoside, quercetin 3-O-glucoside, ferulic acid, caffeoylferuloylquinic acid isomer, isorhamnetin 3-O-glucoside, diosmetin 7-O-glucoside, luteolin 7-O-glucoside, diferuloylquinic acid, quercetin, dicaffeoylferuloylquinic acid isomer, 3-O-methylquercetagetin, luteolin, 8-methoxykaempferol, 3,5-dimethoxyquercetagetin, caffeoyldiferuloyl quinic acid, kaempferol, 3,5-dihydroxy-6,7,4′-trimethoxyflavone, and 3,5-dihydroxy-6,7,3′,4′-tetramethoxyflavone | In vitro | Polyphenols present in | [ | |
| nt | Herb | Sesquiterpenoid lactone | Artemisinin | In vivo | Regression of prostate cancer in a patient treated (at dose 5 mg/day) with capsules containing a concentrate with | [ | ||
| Methanol | Leaves | nt | nt | In vitro | Methanolic extract from | [ | ||
|
| Methanol | Aerial part | nt | nt | In vitro | Inhibition of tumor cell growth in cancer cell lines: MCF-7 (IC50 = 190 ng/mL), HeLa (IC50 = 284 ng/mL), A7R5 (IC50 = 382 ng/mL), 293T (IC50 = 317 ng/mL), and SW-480 (IC50 = 778 ng/mL). | [ | |
|
|
| Methanolic | Herb | nt | nt | In vivo (mice) | Reduction in temperature-induced pain in mice at doses of 300 mg/kg, 500 mg/kg or 1000 mg/kg. | [ |
| Essential oil/Aqueous | Aerial part | nt | nt | In vivo (mice) | Reduction in episodes in the writhing test and delay in pain response in the hot plate test in mice after the administration of | [ | ||
|
| Essential oil | Herb | Monoterpenoids | Camphor, 1,8-cineol, and α-pinene | In vivo (mice) | Administration of essential oil (at dose 400 mg/kg) from | [ | |
|
| Hydro-ethanol | Aerial part | Flavonoids, phenolic acids | Rutoside, hydroxybenzoic acid derivatives, and caffeic acid and its derivatives. | In vivo (mice) | Mild peripheral antinociceptive effect of extract (at dose 100 and 250 mg/kg). | [ | |
|
|
| Dichloromethane | Herb | Phenylpropanoid derivatives, sterols, coumarin | In vitro | Compounds present in herbal extracts reduce the activity of carbonic anhydrase I (hCA I) and II (hCA II) (IC50 = 0.02 μg/mL for hCA I, and IC50 = 0.31 μg/mL for hCA II). | [ | |
|
|
| Methanol | Aerial part | nt | nt | In vivo (rats) | Methanolic extract (at dose 100 and 200 mg/kg) from | [ |
| Aqueous | Herb | nt | nt | In vivo (rats) | Protective effect of | [ | ||
| Herb | Sesquiterpenoid dimer | Caruifolin D | In vitro (BV2 microglial cells) | Caruifolin D in | [ | |||
|
|
| Methanol | Aerial part | nt | nt | In vivo (mice) | Shortening of the period of mouse immobility in the forced swim test (at dose 1000 mg/kg) and in the tail suspension test (at dose 500 mg/kg). | [ |
|
| Ethanol | Herb | nt | nt | In vivo (mice) | Increased resistance to stressful situations and reduction in stress-related levels of inflammatory cytokines. | [ | |
| Ethanol | Herb | Phenolic acids, flavonoids | Chlorogenic acid, caffeic acid or luteolin and quercetin | In vivo (mice) | Phenolic compounds and flavonoids contained in the | [ | ||
| Ethanol | Herb | Coumarins | Herniarin, skimmin c | In vitro | Mild inhibition of hMAO-A (human monoamine oxidase A) and hMAO-B (human monoamine oxidase B) by extracts of | [ | ||
|
|
| Ethanol | Aerial part | nt | nt | In vitro (human cortical brain cells) | Extract in concentration 29 mg/mL had affinity for human muscarinic (99.8%) and nicotinic receptors (99.8%) responsible for cognitive functions. | [ |
|
|
| Methanol, ethanol and aqueous | Aerial part | nt | nt | In vitro (PC12D cells (cell line of rat pheochromocytoma tumor) | Methanolic, ethanolic, and aqueous extracts from | [ |
|
|
| Essential oil | Aerial part | nt | nt | In vivo (rats) | Administration of | [ |
|
|
| Hydroalcoholic | Aerial part | nt | nt | In vitro | Hydroalcoholic extract from | [ |
|
|
| Essential oil | Aerial part | nt | nt | In vitro | Reduction in fat droplet accumulation and inhibition of PPARγ (peroxisome proliferator- activated receptor gamma), C/EBPα (CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein), SREBP-1c (Sterol regulatory element-binding protein 1), FAS, and ACC (Acetyl-CoA carboxylase) protein expression under the influence of | [ |
| Hydro-ethanol | Leaves | nt | nt | In vivo (mice) | Reduction in insulin resistance, liver steatosis, and fibrosis. Lowering the levels of SREBP-1c, ChREBP (carbohydrate-responsive element-binding protein), and COX-2 (cyclooxygenase-2). Inhibition of TGF-β1 and connective tissue growth factor. | [ | ||
|
|
| Ethanol | Herb | nt | nt | In vivo | Encapsulated ethanolic extract of | [ |
|
|
| Aqueous | Root | nt | nt | In vivo (rat) | Normalized serum lipid profile, a significant increase in paraoxonase-1 activity, and decrease in serum malondialdehyde, nitric oxide, and tumor necrosis factor-α levels and in hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA reductase activity. | [ |
|
|
| Aqueous and chloroform | Aerial part | nt | nt | In vivo (rats) | A 10% solution of the aqueous extract inhibiting the hypertensive effect of noradrenaline. | [ |
|
|
| Methanol | Aerial part | Alkaloids, coumarins, flavonoids, saponins, sterols, tannins, and terpenoids | nt | In vivo (rabbit jejunum and guinea pig trachea) | Anticholinergic and Ca2+ antagonist mechanisms. Histamine H1 antagonism in the ileum and trachea. | [ |
|
|
| Aqueous | Herb | nt | nt | In vivo (rats) | Extract (at dose 300 mg/kg) caused increase in thyroxine and triiodothyronine levels, decrease in thyrotropin levels, increase in total antioxidant capacity, increase in glutathione, and decrease in malondialdehyde levels. | [ |
|
|
| Ethyl acetate | Aerial part | Flavonoids | Eriodictyol and apigenin | In vivo (rats) | Antagonism toward the estrogen receptor and activation of gene transcription. Induction of gene transcription by eriodictyol and apigenin. Anti-implantation activity and estrogenic activity on female Wistar rats. | [ |
|
|
| Toluene extract | Herb | Monoterpenoids, coumarins, phenolic acids | Camphor, coumarin and thujyl alcohol, chlorogenic acid and caffeic acid | In vivo | Toluene extract from the herb | [ |
|
| Essential oil | Herb | nt | nt | In vitro | Inhibition of | [ | |
| Essential oil | Herb | nt | nt | In vitro | Larvacidal effect against | [ | ||
|
|
| Reduction in the number of eggs of | [ | |||||
|
| Water, 0.1% sodium bicarbonate solution, dichloromethane, and methanol | Leaves | Sesquiterpenoid lactones | Artemisinin | In vivo | Extracts from | [ | |
|
|
| Ethanol/water (1/1) | Leaves | nt | nt | In vitro/Hemolysis assay | Notable antiprotozoal activity against | [ |
|
|
| Methanol | Herb | nt | nt | In vivo | Improvement in malaria symptoms after treating patients with infusion of | [ |
| Hydro-ethanol and aqueous | Leaves | nt | nt | In vivo | Lethal activity of hydroethanolic and aqueous extracts from | [ | ||
| nt | Herb | Sesquiterpenoid lactones | Artemisinin | In vitro | Interference of artemisinin with protein metabolism and mitochondrial activity of | [ | ||
| nt | Leaves | Sesquiterpenoid lactones | Artemisinin | In vitro | Synergism of action of artemisinin and other compounds present in | [ | ||
|
| Ethanol | Leaves | nt | nt | In vitro | Activity against | [ |
* nt—not tested.
Possible applications of Artemisia species in cosmetology as recommended by the CosIng database [231].
| Species | INCI Name | Description | Functions |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Extract of the whole plant of the Southernwood, | Skin protecting | |
| Extract of the flowers, leaves, and stems of the Southernwood, | Moisturizing | ||
|
| Extract of the whole herb of the Wormwort, | Skin conditioning | |
| Extract obtained from the flowering herb of the Wormwort, | Perfuming | ||
| “Wormwood Oil”, essential oil obtained from the flowering herb of the Wormwort, | Perfuming | ||
| Volatile oil obtained from the whole plant of the Wormwort, | Antimicrobial | ||
| Extract of the whole plant, | Antimicrobial | ||
|
| Extract of the leaves and stems of | Skin conditioning | |
| Extract of the callus of | Antimicrobial | ||
| Extract of the whole herb, | Fragrance | ||
| Extract of the flowers, leaves, and stems of | Skin conditioning—miscellaneous | ||
| Essential oil obtained from the whole herbs of the plant | Perfuming | ||
| Extract obtained from the leaves of the plant | Antiseborrheic | ||
| Extract of the leaves and stems of | Skin conditioning | ||
| Extract of the cultured meristem cells of | Antioxidant | ||
| Volatile oil obtained from the whole plant, | Antioxidant | ||
| Extract of the seeds of | Antioxidant | ||
| Extract of the whole plant | Skin protecting | ||
|
| Flower of | Skin conditioning | |
| Extract obtained from the whole herb of the Tarragon, | Perfuming | ||
| Extract of the leaves and stems of the Tarragon, | Fragrance | ||
| Essential oil obtained from the whole herbs of the Tarragon, | Perfuming | ||
| Extract of the roots of the Tarragon, | Skin conditioning | ||
| Extract of the seeds of the Tarragon, | Skin conditioning | ||
|
| Extract of the whole plant of the Common Mugwort, | Skin conditioning | |
| Extract obtained from the whole herb of the Common Mugwort, | Perfuming | ||
| Extract of the leaves of | Antioxidant | ||
| Volatile oil obtained from the whole herb of the Common Mugwort, | Perfuming |
Cosmetic and potentially cosmetic properties of Artemisia species.
| Direction of Activity | Species | Extract/Essential Oil | Part | Classification | Compounds | Modal/Assay | Short Description of Studies Performed | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ethanol | Aerial parts | nt * | nt | Cup plate method | Lethal effecton the bacteria | [ | ||
| Essential oil | Aerial parts | nt | nt | In vitro/diffusion well agar method ( | Inhibition of the growth of | [ | ||
| Methanol | leaves | nt | nt | A microtiter plate-based protocol (microdilution) | Inhibition of the growth of the bacteria | [ | ||
| Ethanol | herb | nt | nt | In vitro/micromethod of diffusion in agar | Moderate inhibition of the growth of the bacteria | [ | ||
| Essential oil | Aerial parts | nt | nt | In vitro | Growth inhibition by the essential oil from | [ | ||
| Ethanol | Herb | nt | nt | In vitro/micromethod of diffusion in agar | Lethal effect of | [ | ||
| Essential oil | Aerial parts | nt | nt | In vitro | Growth inhibition of the bacteria | [ | ||
| Aerial parts | Phenolic acids | Chlorogenic acid, 4,5-di-O-caffeoylquinic acid | In vitro | Some bactericidal activity of chlorogenic acid and efflux pump inhibition by 4,5-di-O-caffeoylquinic acid isolated from | [ | |||
| Essential oil | Aerial parts | nt | nt | In vitro | Lethal action by essential oil | [ | ||
| Water | Leaves | nt | nt | In vitro (disk diffusion method) | Lethal activity of | [ | ||
| Essential oil | Aerial parts | Monoterpenoids | 1,8-cineole, camphor | In vitro (disk diffusion method) | Lethal activity of essential oil and 1,8-cineol, camphor, and | [ | ||
| Essential oil | Aerial parts | nt | nt | In vitro (disk diffusion method) | Essential oil inhibits growth of the bacteria | [ | ||
| Essential oil | Herb | nt | nt | In vitro (disk diffusion method) | Inhibition of the growth of | [ | ||
| Essential oil | Leaves | nt | nt | In vitro (agar well diffusion) | Essential oil of | [ | ||
| Hydro-ethanol | Leaves | nt | nt | In vitro (disk diffusion method)/In vivo (mice) | Hydroethanolic extract of | [ | ||
| Essential oil | Aerial parts | nt | nt | In vitro/paper disc diffusion method ( | Inhibitory effect of the oil fraction on the development of | [ | ||
| Ethanol | Herb | Polyphenols | Apigenin, caffeic acid, chlorogenic acid, | In vitro | Moderate antioxidant activity (IC50 = 284.50 µg/mL) of | [ | ||
| Essential oil | Aerial parts | nt | nt | In vitro | Reducing potential and inhibition of lipid peroxidation (82.34%, 1000 µL) by the essential oil from the herb of | [ | ||
| Methanol | Herb | Phenolic acids | Isochlorogenic acid, rosmarinic acid, quercitrin | In vitro | Reducing the potential of methanolic extract from | [ | ||
| Methanol | Herb | Flavonoids, phenolic acids | nt | In vitro | Antioxidant activity of flavonoids and phenolic compounds in | [ | ||
| Methanol | Herb | nt | nt | In vitro/DPPH assay, FRAP assay | Methanolic extracts from | [ | ||
| Essential oil | Aerial parts | nt | nt | In vitro/DPPH assay, ABTS assay | [ | |||
| Methanol | Herb | nt | nt | In vivo (mice) | Reducing properties of | [ | ||
| Methanol | Leaves | Phenolic acids, flavonoids | nt | In vitro | Methanolic extracts from | [ | ||
| Hexane, chloroform, methanol, and water | Leaves | nt | nt | In vitro | Reducing activity of | [ | ||
| Essential oil | Herb | Monoterpenoids | 1,8-cineol, and α-pinene | In vitro | Essential oil from | [ | ||
| Hydro-ethanol | Herb | Flavonoids, phenolic acids | nt | In vitro | Reducing properties of the hydroethanolic herbal extract related to the presence of phenolic compounds and flavonoids. | [ | ||
| Hydro-ethanol | Herb | Flavonoids, phenolic acids | nt | In vitro | Proved by different methods, such as DPPH (IC50 value was 65.5 μg/mL), lipid peroxidation, protein glycation, xanthine oxidases, ABTS, hydroxyl, superoxide, nitric oxide, ferric reducing power activity, and inhibition of lipid peroxidation by thiobarbituric acid reactive species assays. | [ | ||
| Essential oil/Methanol | Aerial parts | nt | nt | In vivo (mice) | Reduction (41%) in inflammatory edema in mice after administration of the essential oil (at dose 4 and 8 mg/kg) or methanolic extract from | [ | ||
| nt | Aerial parts | flavonoid | 5,6,3′,5′-tetramethoxy-7,4-hydroxyflavone (p7F) | In vitro, In vivo (mice) | Inhibition of the expression of nitric oxide synthase and cyclooxygenase-2, reduction in the production of prostaglandin E2, nitric oxide, and tumor necrosis factor (TNF-α), reduction in the accumulation of reactive oxygen species by 5,6,3′,5′-tetramethoxy-7,4-hydroxyflavone isolated from | [ | ||
| nt | Aerial parts | Chalcone | Cardamonin | In vitro (THP-1 (monocyte cell line of acute monocytic leukaemia) and RAW 264.7 (cell line of mouse macrophages) | Cardamonin isolated from | [ | ||
| Methanol | Herb | nt | nt | In vivo (rats) | Reduction in paw edema in rats given carrageenan and venom of | [ | ||
| supercritical CO2 | Herb | nt | nt | In vivo | Reduction in pain and stiffness in joints and improvement in mobility after using | [ | ||
| Aqueous | Leaves | Phenolic acid | Rosmarinic acid | Use of aqueous extracts from | [ | |||
| Ethanol, Aqueous | Herb | nt | nt | In vivo (mice) | Reduction in pain sensations and xylene-induced ear edema after the administration of the ethanolic herbal extract (at dose 50 and 100 mg/kg) to mice. | [ | ||
| Methanol | Leaves | nt | nt | In vivo (rats) | Extract (at dose 400 mg/kg) caused the normalization of serum lipid profile, an increase in paraoxonase-1 activity, and a decrease in serum malondialdehyde, nitric oxide, and TNF-α level. Proved by lipoxygenase inhibitory activity assay and “Cotton Pellet Granuloma method.” | [ | ||
| Aqueous | Aerial parts | nt | nt | In vivo | Decrease in skin sensitivity and eye sensitivity. | [ |
* nt—not tested.
Examples of some cosmetics based on Artemisia species.
| Producer | Country of Origin | Trade Name | Cosmetic Form | The Form of | Properties of the Cosmetic According to the Producer | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alpha Keri | Australia | Breast Lift And Firm | Cream | Firming the skin of the bust | [ | ||
| Dr. Hauschka | German | Sensitive care conditioner | Ampoules | The treatment in sensitive ampoules for day and night is intended for sensitive skin prone to redness and dilated blood vessels | [ | ||
| Laura Mercier | Japan | Infusion De Rose Moisturizing Glow Mask | Mask | Hydrates and soothes skin | [ | ||
| Dermika | Poland | Neocollagen M + Phytoestrogen Anti-Wrinkle Cream | Cream | Regenerating, antiwrinkle effect | [ | ||
| Aveeno | USA | Fresh Essentials Daily Nourishing Moisturizer SPF 30 | Cream | For daily skin hydration and protection against UV radiation | [ | ||
| Christophe Robin Paris | USA | Cleansing Mask With Lemon | Mask | Cleans colored and thin hair | [ | ||
| RéVive | USA | Intensité Complete Anti-Aging Eye Serum | Serum | Antiaging decreases the appearance of lines and wrinkles and gives skin a smoother, more youthful appearance | [ | ||
| USANA Celavive® Skincare | USA | Hydrating + Lifting Sheet Mask | Mask | Lifts, hydrates, and rejuvenates skin’s appearance | [ | ||
| Cera Skin Care | Canada | Timeless Retinol Night Mask | Mask | Diminishes the appearance of fine lines, wrinkles, pore size, and problematic skin imperfections | [ | ||
| It cosmetics | France | No. 50 Serum Collagen Veil Anti-Aging Face Primer | Serum | Hydrating and antiaging activity | [ | ||
| Natura Siberica | Russia | Super Siberica Krasnika, Amaranth & Arginine, Care Cream | Cream | Makes hair soft and manageable | [ | ||
| MAN:YO | South Korea | Zaodam Sooc Essence Toner | Toner | Soothes essence toner to quickly treat damaged skin | [ | ||
| Mizon | South Korea | Multi-function formula all in one snail repair cream | Cream | Intense regenerative, moisturizing effect; narrows pores; regenerates, firms, and helps to lighten discoloration | [ | ||
| Bioelements | USA | Restorative Clay | Mask | Cleansing skin pores | [ | ||
| Kiehl’s | USA | Calendula Deep Cleansing Foaming Face Wash | Foam | Deeply cleansing face, cleansing foam | [ | ||
| MALIN + GOETZ | USA | Resurfacing Serum | Serum | Smoothens, clarifies, and brightens skin | [ | ||
| Neogen Dermatology | USA | Vita Lightening Serum | Serum | Helps to reduce the appearance of discolorations for illuminating radiance and its potent antioxidant ingredients; moisturizes and revitalizes skin | [ | ||
| Pixi | USA | Rose Glow Mist | Essence | Strengthens skin | [ | ||
| Commonlabs | Malaysia | Vitamin E Micro Needle Spot Cream | Cream | Antiacne activity | [ | ||
| Kingnature | Swiss | Artemisia creme | Cream | Protects and cares for the skin and has a supporting effect on skin irritations and skin problems | [ | ||
| Su:m37 | Singapore | Losec Summa Elixir Foam Cleanser | Gel | Purifies and comforts the skin | [ | ||
| Dr. Oracle | South Korea | Artemisia Ultra Calming Serum | Serum | Skin-soothing effect to irritated or sensitive skin | [ | ||
| MISSHA | South Korea | Artemisia Calming Ampoule | Essence | Controls the balance of hydration and lubrication of the skin, soothes irritation and redness, controls the balance of hydration and lubrication of the skin, and soothes irritation and redness | [ | ||
| Neogen Dermatology | USA | Dermalogy Green Tea Moist PHA Gauze Peeling | Peeling | Exfoliates and moisturizes skin | [ | ||
| PURE’AM | USA | Authentic Barrier Cream Balm | Cream | Nourishes, repairs, and strengthens natural skin barrier | [ | ||
| ESPA | Great Britain | Age-Rebel Moisturiser | Cream | Moisturizes, nourishes, and smoothens skin | [ | ||
| Lush | Great Britain | Dirty Shampoo | Shampoo | Cleanses hair | [ | ||
| Hayejin | South Korea | Blessing Of Sprout Radiance Toner | Toner | Brightens skin’s complexion, balances pH level, and moisturizes the skin | [ | ||
| Onekind | USA | Mega Multitasker All-Day Moisturizer | Cream | Hydrating, has antioxidant activity, and defends against daily damage | [ | ||
| Humphrey | Canada | Mugwort Anti Acne Serum | Serum | Treats acne, reduces inflammation on acne-prone skin, soothes and moisturizes skin | [ | ||
| Vgam | Canada | Pure Artik | Gel | Gently removes impurities and protects skin | [ | ||
| Annayake | France | Makeup Remover Gel | Gel | Cleanses face and eye and removes makeup | [ | ||
| Cherry Brenchez | Great Britain | Venus Reviver Serum | Serum | Moisturizes skin, reduces spots and fine lines, and protects skin from sun damage | [ | ||
| Monuskin | Great Britain | Rosewood Reviving Mist | Essence | Refreshes and revitalizes skin | [ | ||
| R10 Labs | Great Britain | Hybrid Iq Shaving Gel-Oil | Gel | Softens the hair and makes it easier to shave | [ | ||
| Somethinc | Indonesia | AHA 7% BHA 1% PHA 3% Weekly Peeling Solution | Peeling | Helps clean clogged pores and remove dead skin cells | [ | ||
| Moraz | Israel | Body Oil Skin Saver | Oil | Hydrating and reduces burns, redness, itching and dryness | [ | ||
| Manuka Doctor | New Zealand | Apiclear Purifying Facial Peel | Peeling | Removes dead cells and stimulates cell renewal | [ | ||
| Skintific | Norway | Mugwort Anti Pores & Acne Clay Mask Pore Clarifying Wash Off Pack | Mask | Helps clean clogged pores, reduces skin changes, and brightens skin | [ | ||
| Natura Siberica | Russia | Anti Dandruff Shampoo | Shampoo | Cleanses the hair and has antidandruff properties | [ | ||
| Aprilskin | South Korea | Artemisia Essence Rice Toner | Toner | Calms and hydrates skin and makes skin firm | [ | ||
| I’m From | South Korea | Mugwort Spot Gel | Gel | Stabilizes sebum production and soothes skin | [ | ||
| Manyo Factory | South Korea | Herb Green Cleansing Oil | Cleansing oil | Cleanses skin | [ | ||
| Dermalogica | USA | Overnight Active Clearing Gel | Gel | Removes skin cells and regulates excess sebum | [ | ||
| Rms Beauty | USA | “re” Evolve Radiance Locking Hydrating Primer | Primer | Keeps makeup all day long | [ |