Abstract

BackgroundThe medicinal plants Vincetoxicum arnottianum (VSM), Berberis orthobotrys (BORM), Onosma hispida (OHRM and OHAM) and Caccinia macranthera (CMM) are used traditionally in Pakistan and around the world for the treatment of various diseases including cancer, dermal infections, uterine tumor, wounds etc. The present study focuses on the investigation of the selected Pakistani plants for their potential as anticancer agents on human bone and breast cancer cell lines in comparison with non-tumorigenic control cells.MethodsThe antitumor evaluation was carried out on human bone (MG-63, Saos-2) and breast cancer cell lines (MCF-7, BT-20) in contrast to non-tumorigenic control cells (POB, MCF-12A) via cell viability measurements, cell cycle analysis, Annexin V/PI staining, microscopy based methods as well as migration/invasion determination, metabolic live cell monitoring and western blotting.ResultsAfter the first initial screening of the plant extracts, two extracts (BORM, VSM) revealed the highest potential with regard to its antitumor activity. Both extracts caused a significant reduction of cell viability in the breast and bone cancer cells in a concentration dependent manner. The effect of VSM is achieved primarily by inducing a G2/M arrest in the cell cycle and the stabilization of the actin stress fibers leading to reduced cell motility. By contrast BORM’s cytotoxic properties were caused through the lysosomal-mediated cell death pathway indicated by an upregulation of Bcl-2 expression.ConclusionsThe antitumor evaluation of certain medicinal plants presented in this study identified the methanolic root extract of Berberis orthobotrys and the methanolic extract of Vincetoxicum arnottianum as promising sources for exhibiting the antitumor activity. Therefore, the indigenous use of the herbal remedies for the treatment of cancer and cancer-related diseases has a scientific basis. Moreover, the present study provides a base for phytochemical investigation of the plant extracts.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12906-016-1215-9) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The medicinal plants Vincetoxicum arnottianum (VSM), Berberis orthobotrys (BORM), Onosma hispida (OHRM and Onosma hispida aerial parts (OHAM)) and Caccinia macranthera (CMM) are used traditionally in Pakistan and around the world for the treatment of various diseases including cancer, dermal infections, uterine tumor, wounds etc

  • Preparation of extracts Each plant sample including the aerial part of V. arnottianum (VSM), root (BORM) and fruit (BOFM) parts of B. orthobotrys, root (OHRM) and aerial (OHAM) parts of O. hispida, and the aerial part of C. macranthera (CMM) were air dried in shade and mechanically ground to fine powder

  • Initial screening on cell viability To evaluate the anticancer properties of the Pakistani plant extracts two bone (MG-63, Saos-2) and two breast (BT-20, MCF-7) cancer cell lines in comparison with primary osteoblasts (POB-110) and non-tumorigenic mammary epithelial cells (MCF-12A) were selected

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Summary

Introduction

The medicinal plants Vincetoxicum arnottianum (VSM), Berberis orthobotrys (BORM), Onosma hispida (OHRM and OHAM) and Caccinia macranthera (CMM) are used traditionally in Pakistan and around the world for the treatment of various diseases including cancer, dermal infections, uterine tumor, wounds etc. Natural products have historically and continually been investigated for promising new leads in pharmaceutical development. The discovery of effective herbs and elucidation of their underlying mechanisms could lead to the development of an alternative and complementary method for cancer prevention and/or treatment. Based on an analysis of published literature, we selected four traditional Pakistani plants with medicinal value to evaluate their anticancer efficacy. In search of the target plant extracts for the development of anticancer drugs, here we have investigated Vincetoxicum arnottianum, Berberis orthobotrys, Onosma hispida and Caccinia macranthera of Pakistan origin

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