Abstract
Ethnopharmacological relevanceEight indigenous medicinal plants which are used traditionally for the treatment of tuberculosis (TB), malaria, and associated symptoms, were selected for this study. Aim of studyThe aim of this study was to evaluate the antiplasmodial and antimycobacterial activities of the organic and aqueous crude extracts of different plant parts, by comparing the activities of subfractions (lead-like enhanced [LLE] extracts and methanol fractions) prepared from the bioactive crude extracts. Materials & methodsCrude aqueous and organic extracts were prepared for 25 different plant parts obtained from eight plant species. In vitro antiplasmodial activity was evaluated using the parasite lactate dehydrogenase assay against chloroquine-sensitive Plasmodium falciparum NF54 and in vitro antimycobacterial activity determined against the Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv-GFP strain in a standard broth microdilution assay. The bioactive crude extracts were subjected to solid phase extraction with Strata-X 33 μm reversed phase cartridges and eluted with 70:30 MeOH: H2O:1% trifluoroacetic acid to yield the LLE extract, followed by a methanol rinse, herein referred to as the MeOH fraction. Both fractions were evaluated for antiplasmodial and antimycobacterial activity. Proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H-NMR) and ultraperformance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC-MS/MS) profiling of the crude and active fractions of the phytochemically unexplored Sarcocaulon marlothii Engl. were performed to aid the identification of a potential antiplasmodial lead compound. ResultsTen of the aqueous and organic crude extracts displayed antimycobacterial activity, with minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC90) values ranging from 9.9 to 86.8 μg/mL, and four crude extracts showed antiplasmodial activity with inhibitory concentration (IC50) values between 5.2 and 17.8 μg/mL. Although the stems of S. marlothii are traditionally used to treat TB and related symptoms, the two crude extracts displayed weak antimycobacterial activity (MIC90 > 100 μg/mL) while the crude organic extract displayed moderate antiplasmodial activity with an IC50 value of 8.8 μg/mL. None of the LLE extracts prepared from the ten antimycobacterial-active crudes displayed any significant activity (MIC90 > 125 μg/mL). In contrast, fractionation of three antiplasmodial-active, crude organic extracts yielded MeOH fractions which displayed a 2-fold to 19-fold increase in activity. The 1H-NMR profiles of the active MeOH fraction (IC50 4.3 μg/mL) of S. marlothii (organic, stem) revealed the likely presence of an unidentified trisubstituted cinnamic acid derivative as one of the major compounds and UPLC-MS/MS data provided additional evidence that the compound may be a hydroxycinnamic acid derivative. Unfortunately, owing to the paucity of the material obtained, we were unable to purify and unequivocally determine the structure of this active compound. ConclusionsThis is the first report on the phytochemical profiling of S. marlothii and, based on the antiplasmodial activity recorded, it merits an in-depth phytochemical analysis for the unequivocal characterization of a potential antiplasmodial lead compound. Results from this study lend support to the effectiveness of extract enrichment in combination with NMR fingerprinting for antiplasmodial lead identification.
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