ABSTRACT
Extracts of seven medicinal plants used specifically against cutaneous leishmaniasis in the Madre de Dios region of Peru were evaluated in vitro against promastigote and axenic amastigote forms of Leishmania amazonensis. One of them showed interesting leishmanicidal activities (IC(50)=5 microg/ml in amastigotes). Bio-guided isolation of the stem bark's ethanol extract of Himatanthus sucuuba (Spruce ex Müll. Arg.) Woodson (Apocynaceae) afforded the spirolactone iridoids isoplumericin and plumericin. The latter showed a reduction of macrophage infection similar to that of the reference drug Amphotericin B (IC(50)=0.9 and 1 microM, respectively). These findings validate the traditional use of Himatanthus sucuuba in the treatment of cutaneous leishmaniasis (Uta) in Peru.
Subject(s)
Antiprotozoal Agents , Apocynaceae/chemistry , Indenes/pharmacology , Iridoids/pharmacology , Leishmania mexicana/drug effects , Spironolactone/pharmacology , Animals , BALB 3T3 Cells , Biological Assay , Chlorocebus aethiops , Crystallography, X-Ray , Ethnobotany , Humans , In Vitro Techniques , Indians, South American , Leishmania mexicana/growth & development , Macrophages/drug effects , Macrophages/parasitology , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Male , Medicine, Traditional , Mice , Mice, Inbred BALB C , Peru , Plant Extracts/chemistry , Plant Extracts/pharmacology , Vero CellsABSTRACT
Lepidium peruvianum root has been traditionally utilized by native Peruvians, since before the time of the Incas, for both nutritional and putative medicinal purposes as an adaptogen and also to enhance fertility in humans and animals. The present research was conducted to evaluate the anti-stress activity of the methanolic extract of Lepidium peruvianum. The drug is capable of attenuating or even eliminating variations in homeostasis produced by stress since it reduces or abolishes stress-induced ulcers, elevated corticosterone levels, the reduction of glucose and the increase in the weight of adrenal glands produced by stress. It also eliminates the decrease in free fatty-acids (FFA) in plasma produced by stress and we obtain a positive result in the forced-swimming test. Thus, it did not appear to affect restraint stress-induced immunosuppression.