Abstract

Plant-derived compounds that modulate the immune responses are emerging as frontline treatment agents for cancer, infectious diseases and autoimmunity. Herein we have isolated 40 phytochemicals from five Bhutanese Sowa Rigpa medicinal plants—Aconitum laciniatum, Ajania nubegina, Corydalis crispa, Corydalis dubia and Pleurospermum amabile—and tested 14 purified compounds for their immunomodulatory properties using a murine dendritic cell (DC) line, and cytotoxicity against a human cholangiocyte cell line using xCELLigence real time cell monitoring. These compounds were: pseudaconitine, 14-veratryolpseudaconitine, 14-O-acetylneoline, linalool oxide acetate, (E)-spiroether, luteolin, luteolin-7-O-β-d-glucopyranoside, protopine, ochrobirine, scoulerine, capnoidine, isomyristicin, bergapten, and isoimperatorin. Of the 14 compounds tested here, scoulerine had adjuvant-like properties and strongly upregulated MHC-I gene and protein expression whereas bergapten displayed immunosuppressive properties and strongly down-regulated gene and protein expression of MHC-I and other co-stimulatory molecules. Both scoulerine and bergapten showed low cytotoxicity against normal healthy cells that were consistent with their immunoregulatory properties. These findings highlight the breadth of immunomodulatory properties of defined compounds from Bhutanese medicinal plants and show that some of these compounds exert their mechanisms of action by modulating DC activity.

Highlights

  • The role of plants in preventing and healing ailments has been known since antiquity

  • Five medicinal plants: A. laciniatum, A. nubigena, C. crispa, C. dubia, and P. amabile were collected for their roots, aerial parts and whole plant materials from the high altitude Himalayan alpine mountains of Bhutan (3500–4900 m above sea level)

  • Five medicinal plants—A. laciniatum, A. nubigena, C. crispa, C. dubia, and P. amabile—which grow in extreme Himalayan mountain ecology—are used in the scholarly Bhutanese traditional medicines for treating various disorders that bore relevance to modern disease pathologies including inflammation, tumor and infections

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Summary

Introduction

The role of plants in preventing and healing ailments has been known since antiquity. Ancient Egyptians (Ebers Papyrus), Chinese (Huangdi Neijing), Indians (Ayurvedic), Greeks (Hippocratic-Galenic), Romans (Greco-Roman), Arabs (Unani-Tibb), and Bhutanese (Sowa Rigpa) used plants in crude forms as traditional medicines, home remedies, potions and oils [2]. These crude drugs or crude extracts from plants contain many complex compounds with therapeutic properties. The crude bark extract from cinchona tree was used for treating malaria since 1632 and later in 1820, a pure antimalarial compound (quinine) was isolated, which marked the first successful use of a chemical compound in modern medicine to treat infectious diseases [4]. In 1897, aspirin was first manufactured as a synthetic analogue of salicylic acid that was isolated from a willow tree [5], paving the way to the multi-billion dollar synthetic pharmaceutical industry

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