Abstract

BackgroundNew alternatives for the treatment of Tuberculosis (TB) are urgently needed and medicinal plants represent a potential option. Chamaedora tepejilote and Lantana hispida are medicinal plants from Mexico and their hexanic extracts have shown antimycobacterial activity. Bioguided investigation of these extracts showed that the active compounds were ursolic acid (UA) and oleanolic acid (OA).MethodsThe activity of UA and OA against Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv, four monoresistant strains, and two drug-resistant clinical isolates were determined by MABA test. The intracellular activity of UA and OA against M. tuberculosis H37Rv and a MDR clinical isolate were evaluated in a macrophage cell line. Finally, the antitubercular activity of UA and OA was tested in BALB/c mice infected with M. tuberculosis H37Rv or a MDR strain, by determining pulmonary bacilli loads, tissue damage by automated histomorphometry, and expression of IFN-γ, TNF-α, and iNOS by quantitative RT-PCR.ResultsThe in vitro assay showed that the UA/OA mixture has synergistic activity. The intracellular activity of these compounds against M. tuberculosis H37Rv and a MDR clinical isolate in a macrophage cell line showed that both compounds, alone and in combination, were active against intracellular mycobacteria even at low doses. Moreover, when both compounds were used to treat BALB/c mice with TB induced by H37Rv or MDR bacilli, a significant reduction of bacterial loads and pneumonia were observed compared to the control. Interestingly, animals treated with UA and OA showed a higher expression of IFN-γ and TNF-α in their lungs, than control animals.ConclusionUA and OA showed antimicrobial activity plus an immune-stimulatory effect that permitted the control of experimental pulmonary TB.

Highlights

  • New alternatives for the treatment of Tuberculosis (TB) are urgently needed and medicinal plants represent a potential option

  • We have previously reported that the hexanic fractions from these plants had in vitro antimycobacterial activity and their bioguided fractionation showed that the triterpenic compounds ursolic acid (UA) and oleanolic acid (OA) were the specific agents involved in this activity [6,7,8]

  • The effect of both terpenoids was determined against a MDR M. tuberculosis strain MTY 147 and against a drug-resistant M. tuberculosis strain coded as MMDO that is resistant to isoniazid and ethambutol and five non-tuberculous mycobacteria (M. avium, M. smegmatis, M. simiae, M. chelonae and M. fortuitum)

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Summary

Introduction

New alternatives for the treatment of Tuberculosis (TB) are urgently needed and medicinal plants represent a potential option. Chamaedora tepejilote and Lantana hispida are medicinal plants from Mexico and their hexanic extracts have shown antimycobacterial activity Bioguided investigation of these extracts showed that the active compounds were ursolic acid (UA) and oleanolic acid (OA). There is an urgent need to discover new antituberculous agents that are effective in the treatment of MDR cases and novel agents that can shorten the long conventional chemotherapy in drug-sensitive TB. Within this context, new synthetic drugs, and natural products from medicinal plants are potential sources of new anti-mycobacterial products

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