Title : Pharmacological properties and protein binding capacity of phenolic extracts of some Venda medicinal plants used against cough and fever - Mulaudzi_2012_J.Ethnopharmacol_143_185 |
Author(s) : Mulaudzi RB , Ndhlala AR , Kulkarni MG , Van Staden J |
Ref : J Ethnopharmacol , 143 :185 , 2012 |
Abstract :
ETHNOPHARMACOLOGY RELEVANCE Several ailments are caused by infectious bacteria and in other diseases they act as co-infection which complicate human life by causing health hazards In Venda South Africa many plants are used in traditional medicine to treat cough and fever AIM OF THE STUDY This study was aimed at evaluating the antibacterial and antifungal properties cyclooxygenases COX acetylcholinesterase AChE enzyme inhibitory effects and the phenolic composition as well as mutagenic properties of six medicinal plants used by the Venda people of Limpopo Province of South Africa against cough and fever MATERIALS AND METHODS The petroleum ether PE dichloromethane DCM 80 ethanol EtOH and water extracts of six plants were tested against four infectious bacteria Bacillus subtilis Escherichia coli Klebsiella pneumoniae and Staphylococcus aureus and a fungus Candida albicans The same extracts were evaluated for their ability to inhibit COX-1 and 2 enzymes Methanolic and water extracts of the same plant were tested for acetylcholinesterase inhibitory effects Total phenolics flavonoids gallotannins and condensed tannins were determined The ability of the extracts to bind and precipitate proteins was also investigated The extracts were investigated for genotoxicity with and without S9 metabolic activation against three Salmonella typhimurium tester strains TA98 TA100 and TA102 RESULTS The organic extracts of Rhus lancea leaves exhibited the best antibacterial activity with minimum inhibitory concentration MIC values ranging from 0.0061 to 0.049mg/ml The best antifungal activity was observed from a DCM extract of Syzygium cordatum leaves with a MIC value of 0.195mg/ml The methanolic and water extracts of the same plant exhibited high inhibitory effects towards AChE with IC(50 values of 0.22 and 0.26mg/ml respectively The highest levels of flavonoids and gallotannins were detected in Spirostachys africana bark 11.57 and 48.88mug/g respectively The highest percentages 1.2 of condensed tannins were detected in Uvaria caffra leaves The high levels of phenolic compounds may have been responsible for high antimicrobial activities for extracts of S africana bark and U caffra leaves S cordatum leaves represented the highest affinity for protein binding with 93 All the extracts were non-mutagenic towards the three tested strains with and without S9 metabolic activation CONCLUSION The result obtained in this study goes a long way in validating the ethnobotanical usage of these medicinal plants in the treatment of cough and fever by the Venda people However more evidence obtainable from other assays not performed here are urgently required to confirm these results. |
PubMedSearch : Mulaudzi_2012_J.Ethnopharmacol_143_185 |
PubMedID: 22732728 |
Mulaudzi RB, Ndhlala AR, Kulkarni MG, Van Staden J (2012)
Pharmacological properties and protein binding capacity of phenolic extracts of some Venda medicinal plants used against cough and fever
J Ethnopharmacol
143 :185
Mulaudzi RB, Ndhlala AR, Kulkarni MG, Van Staden J (2012)
J Ethnopharmacol
143 :185