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Ethnobotanical survey and cytotoxicity testing of plants of South-western Nigeria used to treat cancer, with isolation of cytotoxic constituents from Cajanus cajan Millsp. leaves

30 healers in South-west Nigeria were interviewed for plants used to treat cancer. 45 species were identified and their extracts tested for cytotoxicity against various cell lines. Five species displayed considerable activity, including Cajanus cajan leaves, and two stilbenes longistylin A and longi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of ethnopharmacology 2010-03, Vol.128 (2), p.501-512
Main Authors: Ashidi, J.S., Houghton, P.J., Hylands, P.J., Efferth, T.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:30 healers in South-west Nigeria were interviewed for plants used to treat cancer. 45 species were identified and their extracts tested for cytotoxicity against various cell lines. Five species displayed considerable activity, including Cajanus cajan leaves, and two stilbenes longistylin A and longistylin C were isolated from this as major active compounds. There is only scant literature on the anticancer components of medicinal plants from Nigeria, yet traditional healers in the area under study claim to have been managing the disease in their patients with some success using the species studied. To document plants commonly used to treat cancer in South-western Nigeria and to test the scientific basis of the claims using in vitro cytotoxicity tests. Structured questionnaires were used to explore the ethnobotanical practices amongst the traditional healers. Methanol extracts of the most common species cited were screened for cytotoxicity using the sulforhodamine B (SRB) assay in both exposure and recovery experiments. Three cancer cell lines (human breast adenocarcinoma cell line MCF-7, human large cell lung carcinoma cell line COR-L23 and human amelanotic melanoma C32) and one normal cell line (normal human keratinocytes SVK-14) were used for the screening of the extracts and the fractions obtained. The extract of Cajanus cajan showed considerable activity and was further partitioned and the dichloromethane fraction was subjected to preparative chomatography to yield six compounds: hexadecanoic acid methyl ester, α-amyrin, β-sitosterol, pinostrobin, longistylin A and longistylin C. Pinostrobin and longistylins A and C were tested for cytotoxicity on the cancer cell lines. In addition, an adriamycin-sensitive acute T-lymphoblastic leukaemia cell line (CCRF-CEM) and its multidrug-resistant sub-line (CEM/ADR5000) were used in an XTT assay to evaluate the activity of the pure compounds obtained. A total of 30 healers from S W Nigeria were involved in the study. 45 species were recorded with their local names with parts used in the traditional therapeutic preparations. Cytotoxicity (IC 50 values less than 50 μg/mL) was observed in 5 species ( Acanthospermum hispidum, Cajanus cajan, Morinda lucida, Nymphaea lotus and Pycnanthus angolensis). Acanthospermum hispidum and Cajanus cajan were the most active. The dichloromethane fraction of Cajanus cajan had IC 50 value 5–10 μg/mL, with the two constituent stilbenes, longistylins A and C, being primarily responsible,
ISSN:0378-8741
1872-7573
DOI:10.1016/j.jep.2010.01.009