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Plants of the Araceae for malaria and related diseases: a review

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Plants of the Araceae for malaria and related diseases: a review. / Frausin Bustamante, Gina; Braga Souza Lima, Renata; de Freitas Hidalgo, Ari et al.
In: Revista Brasileira de Plantas Medicinais, Vol. 17, 31.10.2015.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Frausin Bustamante, G, Braga Souza Lima, R, de Freitas Hidalgo, A, Ming, LC & Pohlit, AM 2015, 'Plants of the Araceae for malaria and related diseases: a review', Revista Brasileira de Plantas Medicinais, vol. 17.

APA

Frausin Bustamante, G., Braga Souza Lima, R., de Freitas Hidalgo, A., Ming, L. C., & Pohlit, A. M. (2015). Plants of the Araceae for malaria and related diseases: a review. Revista Brasileira de Plantas Medicinais, 17.

Vancouver

Frausin Bustamante G, Braga Souza Lima R, de Freitas Hidalgo A, Ming LC, Pohlit AM. Plants of the Araceae for malaria and related diseases: a review. Revista Brasileira de Plantas Medicinais. 2015 Oct 31;17. Epub 2015 Aug 1.

Author

Frausin Bustamante, Gina ; Braga Souza Lima, Renata ; de Freitas Hidalgo, Ari et al. / Plants of the Araceae for malaria and related diseases : a review. In: Revista Brasileira de Plantas Medicinais. 2015 ; Vol. 17.

Bibtex

@article{fb1a82bd384f44cbbe24a9a131abdc92,
title = "Plants of the Araceae for malaria and related diseases: a review",
abstract = "We survey species of the Araceae family traditionally used for malaria and its symptoms. The aim is to reveal the large number of antimalarial Araceae species in use worldwide and their largely unexplored potential as sources of antimalarial natural products. The SciFinder Scholar, Scielo, PubMed, ScienceDirect and Google books search engines were consulted. Forty-three records were found of 36 species and 23 genera of Araceae used for malaria and symptoms. The neotropical genera Philodendron Schott and Anthurium Schott were the best represented for use in the treatment of malaria, fevers, liver problems and headaches. Leaves and tubers were the parts most used and decoction was the most common preparation method. Extracts of Araceae species inhibit the in vitro growth of thehuman malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum Welch and significant median inhibitory concentrations (IC50) for extracts of guaimb{\^e}-sulcado (Rhaphidophora decursiva (Roxb.) Schott), aninga (Montrichardia linifera (Arruda) Schott), Culcasia lancifolia N.E. Br. and forest anchomanes (Anchomanes difformis (Blume) Engl.) have been reported demonstrating the antimalarial potential and cytotoxicity of extracts and sub-fractions. In the only report on the antimalarial components of this family, the neolignan polysyphorin and the benzoperoxide rhaphidecurperoxin exhibited strong in vitro inhibition of the D6 and W2 strains of Plasmodium falciparum (IC50 = 368-540 ng/mL). No study on the in vivo antimalarial activity in animal models has been conducted on a species of Araceae. More bioguided chemical composition studies on the in vitro and also in vivo antimalarial activity of the Araceae are needed to further the knowledge of the antimalarial potential of this family.",
keywords = "Anthurium, Philodendron, Rhaphidophora decursiva, Plasmodium falciparum, Antimalarial plant",
author = "{Frausin Bustamante}, Gina and {Braga Souza Lima}, Renata and {de Freitas Hidalgo}, Ari and Ming, {Lin Chau} and Pohlit, {Adrian Martin}",
year = "2015",
month = oct,
day = "31",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
journal = "Revista Brasileira de Plantas Medicinais",
issn = "1516-0572",
publisher = "Instituto de Biociencias",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Plants of the Araceae for malaria and related diseases

T2 - a review

AU - Frausin Bustamante, Gina

AU - Braga Souza Lima, Renata

AU - de Freitas Hidalgo, Ari

AU - Ming, Lin Chau

AU - Pohlit, Adrian Martin

PY - 2015/10/31

Y1 - 2015/10/31

N2 - We survey species of the Araceae family traditionally used for malaria and its symptoms. The aim is to reveal the large number of antimalarial Araceae species in use worldwide and their largely unexplored potential as sources of antimalarial natural products. The SciFinder Scholar, Scielo, PubMed, ScienceDirect and Google books search engines were consulted. Forty-three records were found of 36 species and 23 genera of Araceae used for malaria and symptoms. The neotropical genera Philodendron Schott and Anthurium Schott were the best represented for use in the treatment of malaria, fevers, liver problems and headaches. Leaves and tubers were the parts most used and decoction was the most common preparation method. Extracts of Araceae species inhibit the in vitro growth of thehuman malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum Welch and significant median inhibitory concentrations (IC50) for extracts of guaimbê-sulcado (Rhaphidophora decursiva (Roxb.) Schott), aninga (Montrichardia linifera (Arruda) Schott), Culcasia lancifolia N.E. Br. and forest anchomanes (Anchomanes difformis (Blume) Engl.) have been reported demonstrating the antimalarial potential and cytotoxicity of extracts and sub-fractions. In the only report on the antimalarial components of this family, the neolignan polysyphorin and the benzoperoxide rhaphidecurperoxin exhibited strong in vitro inhibition of the D6 and W2 strains of Plasmodium falciparum (IC50 = 368-540 ng/mL). No study on the in vivo antimalarial activity in animal models has been conducted on a species of Araceae. More bioguided chemical composition studies on the in vitro and also in vivo antimalarial activity of the Araceae are needed to further the knowledge of the antimalarial potential of this family.

AB - We survey species of the Araceae family traditionally used for malaria and its symptoms. The aim is to reveal the large number of antimalarial Araceae species in use worldwide and their largely unexplored potential as sources of antimalarial natural products. The SciFinder Scholar, Scielo, PubMed, ScienceDirect and Google books search engines were consulted. Forty-three records were found of 36 species and 23 genera of Araceae used for malaria and symptoms. The neotropical genera Philodendron Schott and Anthurium Schott were the best represented for use in the treatment of malaria, fevers, liver problems and headaches. Leaves and tubers were the parts most used and decoction was the most common preparation method. Extracts of Araceae species inhibit the in vitro growth of thehuman malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum Welch and significant median inhibitory concentrations (IC50) for extracts of guaimbê-sulcado (Rhaphidophora decursiva (Roxb.) Schott), aninga (Montrichardia linifera (Arruda) Schott), Culcasia lancifolia N.E. Br. and forest anchomanes (Anchomanes difformis (Blume) Engl.) have been reported demonstrating the antimalarial potential and cytotoxicity of extracts and sub-fractions. In the only report on the antimalarial components of this family, the neolignan polysyphorin and the benzoperoxide rhaphidecurperoxin exhibited strong in vitro inhibition of the D6 and W2 strains of Plasmodium falciparum (IC50 = 368-540 ng/mL). No study on the in vivo antimalarial activity in animal models has been conducted on a species of Araceae. More bioguided chemical composition studies on the in vitro and also in vivo antimalarial activity of the Araceae are needed to further the knowledge of the antimalarial potential of this family.

KW - Anthurium

KW - Philodendron

KW - Rhaphidophora decursiva

KW - Plasmodium falciparum

KW - Antimalarial plant

M3 - Journal article

VL - 17

JO - Revista Brasileira de Plantas Medicinais

JF - Revista Brasileira de Plantas Medicinais

SN - 1516-0572

ER -