Folk medicinal plants are potential sources of useful therapeutic compounds including some with antiviral activities. Extracts prepared from 10 South American medicinal plants (Baccharis trinervis, Baccharis teindalensis, Eupatorium articulatum, Eupatorium glutinosum, Tagetes pusilla, Neurolaena lob
The potential antileishmanial activity of some Sudanese medicinal plants
β Scribed by Ahmed Ei Tahir; Adil M. Ibrahim; Gwiria M. H. Satti; Thor G. Theander; Arsalam Kharazmi; Sami A. Khalid
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 57 KB
- Volume
- 12
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0951-418X
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β¦ Synopsis
A preliminary examination of the crude methanol extracts of eight plant species collected from Sudan, revealed that only three plant species had a considerable in vitro antileishmanial activity on Leishmania major promastigotes at a concentration 0.5 mg/mL. The plants Azadirchta indica, Maytenus senegalensis and Eucalyptus globulus gave IC 50 values of 11.5, 55 and 78 mg/mL, respectively. Extracts of Pseudocedrela kotscifye and Balanites aegyptiaca had a moderate biological activity, whereas extracts of Sonchous cornatus, Khaya senegalensis and Tamarindus indica failed to exhibit any significant antileishmanial activity against L. major at concentrations 100 mg/mL. Liquid-liquid partitioning of the methanol extracts indicated that fractions of M. senegalensis in dichloromethane and ethyl acetate had the highest antileishmanial activity at 5 mg/mL; IC 50 values were 5.01 and 29.7 mg/mL, respectively. Preliminary phytochemical analysis of the dichloromethane fraction revealed terpenoids and traces of phenolic principles but no alkaloid, tannins or flavonoids were detected. As lymphocyte proliferation was inhibited by P. kotscifye and A. indica at higher concentrations (`50 mg/mL) in the presence of phytohaemagglutinin (PHA), M. senegalensis had no significant toxic effect whereas S. cornatus, T. indica and K. senegalensis had a stimulatory impact on lymphocyte cells.
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